Color Me a Kidlit Writer
  • About Me
  • Mama's Chicken & Dumplings
  • Reviews
  • Other Books & Stuff
  • Magazine Work
  • Work-For-Hire Books
  • School Visits
  • Events
  • Interviews, Blog Parties & More

Welcome, Yaroslava Apollonova, Kidlit Creator

11/8/2022

0 Comments

 
Picture

​(c) Yaroslava Apollonova, odnatamyara.com

Yaroslava Apollonova, Kidlit Creator 


How did you find your way to becoming a kidlit creator?

I’ve always been keen to illustrate children books. Book sections at stores have always been my favorite places--spending hours by! I've been drawing and illustrating literally half my life, since I was 12-years-old. (I'm 24 now.) Also, when I was 12, my sister was born, which was very inspiring to me. I wanted her to hold a book that I had illustrated! Though she’s 13 now, and not interested in picture books anymore--yet still! 

I'm sure your sister will find it pretty cool when she does hold your first traditionally published picture book! So what do you love about writing and illustrating for young readers?

I really enjoy drawing kids, cute things, and fun scenes with lots of objects, basically all those things are portrayed in picture books, so if one niche fits everything I love, then why not, right?

Makes sense to me! I notice, your illustrative style hints of geometric shapes. What about that style attracts you? Would you call it cubism?

All my artistic life I've loved experimenting and challenging myself, so geometry and forms have been something that keeps my brain working, if I can say so. Actually, I think what really had a huge influence on me was taking geometry in school. It was my favorite class. (I was a “know-it-all" annoying student back then. (HaHa!))

I love simplifying things, adding shapes and pushing forms.

I wouldn’t name my style "cubism" or anything else. To me, my style doesn’t seem to fit into those “artistic” styles represented in art galleries and museums. I would actually love to see more work by contemporary artists in galleries and solo exhibitions!

Picture

What types of books would you like to work on?

I would love to work on recipe and cook books! I looove baking, if not drawing I’d definitely be a cook or baker. Haha! That’s always been my dream to illustrate my own recipe book! 
Besides that I’d love to work on any exciting project with interesting narrative story about friendship, parenthood, mental health, or childhood, in general. (I especially love stories with deep physiology meanings.)

How did you and Kelly find each other and why are you glad?

​I was looking for an agent for months, had so many declines, even started thinking something is wrong with my art. Originally, I had queried a different agent at Tobias Literary. Though she didn't offer me representation, she was kind enough to forward my inquiry to Kelly! Kelly was the only one who believed in me! She even seemed happy to sign the contract with me!

So far we have had great conversations. I can ask her anything that bothers me, and we've already begun working on very nice project that I’m very excited about! Working with Kelly feels like a win win for both a us!

Picture
Yaroslava Apollonova is a freelance illustrator and lettering artist based in Budapest, Hungary, and she cannot sleep knowing there are sweets left in her kitchen.
She creates her illustrations for a wide range of clients, from packaging and character designs to children's books and stickers. Currently, she concentrates on kidlit illustrations and projects. Her artworks are always based on geometry, simple forms, unique combinations of textures and colors. She loves using soft color palettes and finding fascinating ways to reveal the story. Find Yara online at odnatamyara.com and on Behance HERE. 


0 Comments

Welcoming Kidlit Creator Caroline McPherson

11/7/2022

0 Comments

 
Picture
(c) Caroline McPherson, eiderduckillustration.com

Caroline McPherson,
​Member of Kelly Dyksterhouse's Kidlit Crew


​What do you love about creating art for children’s books?

I am asked this question quite often. Honestly, it’s the magic of it. I am very much drawn to fairytales and traditional storybook concepts, as who wouldn’t want an excuse to immerse themselves in a world where rabbits run around with pocket watches, or where crocodiles tick, or where partially clothed bears eat honey at every mealtime! The world can feel a bit devoid of magic and imagination at times and so it’s great to escape into an illustrated story and pretend like that’s the norm for a while. 

So true, this! Anything else you love about being a member of the kidlit industry?

I also love how there is so much variety in children’s book illustration with so many amazing artists to learn and be inspired from. I am always working to improve my illustration skills and my story-telling abilities and to have such a wealth of expertise and skill available to draw upon is quite inspirational. You can’t help wanting to get better at what you do when you see how much amazing work others have achieved!

Children’s book illustrators are generally a really good bunch of people too!

That does seem to be a general rule! So, why do you love drawing animals?

I’ve been blessed with a wonderful career working very closely with animals of all species. I’ve worked in a veterinarian clinic, in animal hospitals, and at wildlife parks. I've raised both kittens and kangaroos (separately of course), health-checked an array of animals from puppies to polar bears, assisted in theatre with canine hip replacements, anaesthetized sea turtles, nebulized snakes and rescued orphaned seal pups from freezing cold beaches. And I’ve spent hour upon hour monitoring and recording the various physiological and psychological parameters of animal patients. All this work with animals has given me a fairly unique insight into animals and their behaviors. As a veterinary nurse, for example, it’s your job to observe animals to determine if they are sad, apprehensive, happy and/or content. Animal characterization is now second nature to me.

Besides, I love animals, all animals, and I love capturing their individual personalities in my illustrations, and if that’s whilst they drink a cup of hot cocoa in a forest clearing with their woodland pals--then all the better!

Picture
(c) Caroline McPherson, eiderduckillustration.com

What kinds of books do you hope to write and/or illustrate?

I love a classic storybook. It doesn’t have to be an old classic just one that exudes quality and a heartfelt message. A book which you pick up and from just the title and that first glimpse of art on the cover you know that its going to be exceptional. Any book where each turn of the page feels like a real treat is one to be treasured I think. I have lots of books like that on my bookshelf and they make me smile each and every time I pull one of them down to admire. I aspire to one day create a book like that. One I can be really proud of and hopefully that others will love as much as I do.
 
I also love a good rhyming text as I feel the melody of rhyme can really add to the magical feel I am always looking for in a picture book. I like books that create a feeling of atmosphere, and those centered around a specific idea or event. I’m a fanatic for winter holidays and so festive books with all of their fairy-lit imagery are instant winners with me, and of course, I'm sold with anything with woodland animals in a forest setting!

How did you and Kelly find each other?

Kelly and I found each other through Instagram. Kelly came across an illustration of mine that caught her eye, which in turn directed her to my Instagram account and then to my website and portfolio page. She reached out to me shortly thereafter and we started chatting about representation and author-illustrated work. I liked Kelly from the offset and felt a great sense of confidence in her knowledge and love of children's writing and picture books. Joining her team at Tobias Literary felt like a very natural thing to do and I am grateful that our paths crossed when they did!

Thanks so much, Caroline, for sharing a little bit about your kidlit journey so far. I can't wait to hold one of your illustrated books in my hand!

It's been a delight to be here!

Picture
Caroline McPherson is a British-Australian illustrator whose love of animals, nature and classical picture books shines through her illustrative works, as she combines both analog and digital mediums to create her distinctively soft and textured style. Pastel, crayon and hand rendered textures are her favorite tools and charming animal characters and little round birds her favorite subject matter. When not scribbling away at her desk, Caroline can often be found in the rainforest near her home, looking for pademelons and collecting interesting textures for future art projects. Find Caroline and examples of her joyful work on Instagram  and on her website at eiderduckillustration.com. She is represented by Kelly Dyksterhouse of The Tobias Literary Agency.  


Picture

0 Comments

Interview: Andrea Beatriz Arango, MG Novel-In-Verse Author

9/22/2022

0 Comments

 

An Interview


Andrea Beatriz Arango:
Author of IVELIZ EXPLAINS IT ALL


Picture
Welcome, Andrea! Thanks so much for stopping by! I really enjoyed hearing you read from your middle-grade novel-in-verse IVELIZ EXPLAINS IT ALL during your recent book launch. I see voicing audio books in your future!

Haha! Thanks! I do love to bring my characters to life that way.

I could tell. So, what inspired you to write IVELIZ EXPLAINS IT ALL, and why did you choose the novel-in-verse format?

I wanted to write a book that dealt with mental health in the Latinx community, because I think the shame and stigma associated with therapy & meds for kids is a huge problem that the pandemic has made even worse. I wanted to write it in verse because I'm used to working with students reading below grade level, and I wanted them to be able to access the story too. 

What did you love about working with your editor, and why do you believe the editorial process helped make your book a stronger one?

I picked my editor because she truly championed my book from the start. I could tell she deeply understood the story I was trying to tell. Additionally, her ideas for making the story better aligned with how I saw the book improving. I also think it's helpful to get other eyes on my writing, because sometimes while I'm writing I'm thinking about things that I don't necessarily put on the page. And so having my editor tell me what she needed more of allowed me to zero in on the sections of my book that needed to be fleshed out. 


Picture

Pattern art by Alyssa Bermudez used with permission, alyssabermudezart.com

The editor-author partnership can be a wonderful one that produces wonderful books! While I'm sure you're proud of the starred review your book has received from Kirkus, what type of reviews do you value even more, and why?

I love hearing about actual kids reading the book! Someone posted a review talking about how their kid made notes in the margins because they loved IVELIZ so much and it honestly made my whole day. I wrote the book for middle schoolers and so it's their opinions that matter to me the most. 

That's totally understandable! I hear you have another middle-grade novel-in-verse on the way. Please tell us more! What's it about, and how is it similar or different from IVELIZ?

I'm not sure how much I'm allowed to say yet, but it's called THE DISTANCE BETWEEN YOU AND HOME and it's about a Puerto Rican sixth-grade girl who has to go live with her aunt, who she's never really had a relationship with before. It's a quieter book than IVELIZ, but I think it definitely shares themes of family dynamics, friendship, and mental health. It doesn't come out until next fall, but hopefully I'll be able to share a cover come early 2023. 

Wow! That sounds like a great read, too! I'm already looking forward to it being released!

Thanks, Dionna! I really enjoyed writing it, and I've enjoyed being here.

Thank YOU for coming by and to share a little bit about your kidlit journey. I won't be surprised if IVELIZ will soon be included on many 2022 best books of the year lists!

PictureRandom House, 2022
PUBLISHERS' BLURB:
Seventh grade is going to be Iveliz’s year. She’s going to make a new friend, help her abuela Mimi get settled after moving from Puerto Rico, and she is not going to get into any more trouble at school. 

Except... is that what happens? Of course not. Because no matter how hard Iveliz tries, sometimes people say things that just make her so mad. And worse, Mimi keeps saying Iveliz’s medicine is unnecessary—even though it helps Iveliz feel less sad. But how do you explain your feelings to others when you’re not even sure what’s going on yourself?

Powerful and compassionate, Andrea Beatriz Arango’s debut with inside art by Alyssa Bermudez, navigates mental health, finding your voice, and discovering that those who really love you will stay by your side.


​Andrea, born and raised in Puerto Rico, is a former public school teacher with almost a decade of teaching experience under her belt. She now writes the types of children’s books she wishes her students had more access to. She balances her life in Virginia with trips home to see her family, and eats lots of tostones de pana. More about Andrea HERE.


UPDATE:
Iveliz Explains It All was selected as a 2023 Newbery Honor Award Winner, A Kirkus Reviews Best Book of the Year & a YALSA Best Book for Young Adults! Congrats, Andrea!!!


0 Comments

Interview: HB Steadham, Middle-Grade Author & Newest Member of Kelly D's Kidlit Crew

9/16/2022

0 Comments

 
Picture
(C) Dionna L. Mann

An Interview


​​Welcome, HB, to my blog, and to Kelly Dyksterhouse's list of clients! Do tell. How did you find your way into the kidlit industry?

Well, like most kidlit authors, I'm sure, I started my love with the genre when I was a kid myself! I was an only child, and books like Harriet the Spy, Bunnicula, and The Celery Stalks at Midnight made me feel less alone. I kind of put off writing novels for decades (I get scared when I really wanna succeed at something).

Fast forward to when I was an adult. We had a foster child we hoped to adopt, but he got sent back to live with his parents after we'd had him almost a year. I felt a great deal of loss and pain. I decided to channel my emotions by writing a middle grade novel about what he'd be like when he got older.

To hone my kidlit writing skills, I attended a Media Bistro kidlit workshop in NYC. And eventually--like, another decade later--I went back to school to get my MFA in creative writing. While my MFA focused on creative nonfiction, I never lost my true love: writing kidlit.

I wanted to write books like the ones I first fell in love with. So, I wrote more, got involved with SCBWI, and learned everything I could. And here I am now, crossing my fingers as I ready my work for the kidlit universe.

Very interesting journey! So how did you come to snag your agent (and mine), Kelly Dyksterhouse of Tobias Literary?

In the past, I found QueryTracker to be a GREAT resource for finding agents to query, as is SCBWI. I had written the novel about my former foster child, queried it, but didn’t get any offers of representation. I wrote a second novel about a girl growing up on a military base in Naples, Italy, queried it, and, while waiting for the results of that query, wrote another novel. It’s about a boy who opens his door one day to find Death standing on his front porch. They say the best way to distract yourself from waiting for query news is to start writing a new novel, so that's what I did! I eventually received an offer of rep for the novel about the little girl, and it went out on sub.

Then my family and I moved to Okinawa. I wanted to immerse myself further into the world of publishing, so I started working as an assistant literary agent at The Tobias Literary Agency with Natascha Morris.  It soon became apparent that my own agent relationship wasn't working for me, so we ended on good terms and I began thinking about querying again--this time leading with the novel about the little boy and Death. I really believed (and still do!) that it's the best thing I've written to date.

When thinking about who to query, I was unsure if it was okay for me to approach anyone about representation at Tobias, since I was working there. So, I began thinking about who outside of the agency I could query. I was sad, because I wanted to query Kelly again; I had actually queried her back in 2020 (when she was still at Raven Quill and I wasn't yet working with Tobias) with the book that landed me my first agent. I just knew that she would be perfect for my newest book--the Death book--which is a Southern gothic, contemporary MG. But since she was now an agent at Tobias, I sent her the manuscript just to ask if she knew any agents outside of our agency that might be a good fit for me. But rather than direct me to someone else, Kelly replied that she LOVED the manuscript and asked if she could represent me! Of course, I said yes, and I AM SO HAPPY SHE IS MY AGENT!

I totally get it! Kelly is an amazing advocate for her clients' work! What types of books do you hope to write in the future and what are you working on now?

Middle grade has my heart. I really enjoy writing grounded contemporaries with a touch of magic. And right now, I'm revising the novel I snagged Kelly with, getting it ready to sub to editors. I've also got an idea for new MG contemporary in which a little girl has to deal with the trauma of losing her foster brother. A full circle moment for me, for sure.

Sounds like your kidlit journey is off to a great start! Thanks again for stopping by, and do keep us in the loop when your first book is acquired.

Thanks for having me! It’s been fun.

Picture
HB Steadham is always up for shenanigans and is probably fascinated with something new at this very moment. She loves nothing more than when her brain synapses fire with curiosity and wonder. A lifelong creative, HB has worn more hats than Queen Elizabeth II (may she rest in peace.) Back in her native Arkansas, HB was a rebel high school English teacher that gave her students good books others often deemed troublesome for the shelf. She's also been a professor, an editor, an actor, an award-winning journalist, a foster mom to both humans and pets, a theatre director, a beauty queen, a stand-up comedian, and, of course, a writer. Always a writer. HB currently lives in Okinawa, Japan, with her husband, two daughters, and a son, all of whom speak sarcasm and/or sass as their mother tongue. A graduate of the Arkansas Writers MFA Program, HB has fiction published by Lockjaw Magazine and in a postapocalyptic anthology. Her nonfiction has been published by Narratively and The Toast. And her poetry has appeared in Poetry South. HB is represented by Kelly Dyksterhouse of The Tobias Literary Agency. Find HB online at hbsteadham.com and on Facebook. 


Picture

0 Comments

REVIEW: The Great Stink

8/6/2022

0 Comments

 

THE GREAT STINK: Nothing Stinky About It!

Picture
© Nancy Carpenter, nancycarpenter.website

A Review


The Great Stink: How Joseph Bazalgette Solved London's Poop Pollution Problem, written by Colleen Paeff and illustrated by Nancy Carpenter, is kidlit nonfiction at it's best. For one thing, it's an excellent telling of a most-interesting slice of history. What exactly was causing London's river Thames to stink to high heavens in 1858? Could it have been all that POOP floating within it? Could that poopy water, part of London's drinking supply, have been the culprit behind the deadly outbreaks of cholera? Hmmm, you think?

The Great Stink shines the spotlight on an unsung hero--Joseph Bazalgette. Though a civil engineer during a time when people were more apt to believe superstition than science, Joseph was a true detective, digging for the facts. (Sometimes literally!) He was persistent--never gave up in trying to convince the powers that be that clean drinking water was vital to the health and well-being of the city's inhabitants.

(Did you know that some people back then thought it was OK to drink murky, dirty water, so long as they let the gunk settle to the bottom of their glasses before drinking it? That's the kind of stinky stuff you'll discover when reading this book.)

Thankfully, Joseph wasn't afraid to get his hands dirty (in a clean-it-up sort of way). His love for his city and its inhabitants kept him on task for years. He wanted more than anything to clean up London's smelly problem. After Queen Victoria got ill, Joseph was finally given permission, funds, and manpower to solve London's poopy situation. When all was said and done, he created an entirely new thing--a sewage waste disposal system!

​People could finally unplug their noses!

"The evidence is too strong to ignore. Doctors and scientists gradually begin to accept that contaminated water--not air--causes cholera. By clearing the Thames of pollution, Joseph's sewers are saving lives."


​Kids are sure love this book. They will applaud Joseph's detective skills, tenacity, and his innovative waterworks project that kept the Thames flowing free from raw sewage. In fact, from the back matter, readers will learn that Joseph's method of separating wastewater from people's fresh water supply is still saving lives today.

Joseph created an AHA! moment in history! 

Though a little longer than some picture books, The Great Stink is fast paced. Carpenter's illustrations are sobering while at the same time super fun. They add a level of suspense to each spread. When discussing water conservation, teachers will not regret having a copy of this book in their classroom library. Students of any age will find this story as relevant in our COVID world as it was in the 1850 and 60s. Joseph Bazalgette's victory proved that disease and death can be prevented when common sense and science--the facts--prevail.

Picture
The Great Stink: How Joseph Bazalgette Solved London's Poop Pollution Problem is written by Colleen Paeff, illustrated by Nancy Carpenter, and published by Margaret K. McElderry Books (August 2021). The Great Stink was named a 2022 ALA Robert F. Sibert Award Honor Book, 2022 Cook Prize Finalist, 2022 SCBWI Golden Kite Finalist, a 2021 Chicago Public Library's Best of the Best, and a 2022 CBC-NSTA Best STEM Book. Order your copy from a local indie book store, or from Bookshop.org, HERE.

0 Comments

Meg Medina's One-Minute Writing Tips

6/26/2022

0 Comments

 
Picture
Image courtesy Meg Medina

Salutations, fellow kidlit authors! If you're like me, you probably enjoy gobbling up good advice about the craft of writing for younger readers. Advice that's easy to use and served up in bite-sized morsels (because we're all so busy) is the perfect kind right?

Guess what? Meg Medina, kidlit author extraordinaire, offers such advice for FREE!

For about a year now, Meg has hosted a mini-video series on her Instagram channel (IGTV) called Meg’s One-Minute Writing Tips. Yep, that's right! Each video is just one-minute long! Doesn't that sound like munching on a chocolate bon-bon? YUM!

The reason Meg's advice is so delicious? For one thing, she knows a thing or two about writing yarns for young readers. After all, she is a Newbery-winning children's book author as well as a Hamline University and Highlights Foundation faculty member. For another, she covers a wide range of topics--from building likeable characters to plotting, from not rushing an ending to avoiding professional envy, from dialogue to self-care.

Mainly, the reason you'll enjoy Meg's series is because of the way she presents her advice. You'll feel as though you're sitting across from your friend who happens to be a kidlit pro, coffee in hand. And she's casually sharing with you what she's learned along the way of her writing journey. 

Bottom line: Meg's One-Minute Writing Tips is like having a super friendly, seasoned author encouraging you as a children's book writer, saying "You can do this! I know you can!"

You'll find links to Meg's One-Minute Writing Tips on her Instagram channel (HERE) and posted throughout her Twitter feed (HERE). Start by watching her first segment "On Characters" HERE.
​
Happy learning! (And oh, please share your favorite writing tip in the comments of this post.)
0 Comments

Hooray! Happy Book-Launch Day for THE WILD GARDEN! Meet the Author-Illustrator

5/3/2022

3 Comments

 
Picture
© Cynthia Cliff, cynthiacliff.com

Welcome! Cynthia Cliff,
​Author & Illustrator
of

Picture

Cynthia, welcome! I am super excited about having a share in launching your beautiful new picture book THE WILD GARDEN that came out today! As you know, I've been a fan of your work ever since I discovered it on the Mid-Atlantic SCBWI's Illustrator Gallery. And I must tell you that when I read THE WILD GARDEN, I fell in love not only with your illustrations, but also with the sweet ode your words sing in honor of all that is beautiful and bountiful growing and living in wild, open spaces. Thanks so much for stopping by!

​No, thank you, Dionna! I'm delighted to be here! 
 
The honor is all mine! So, why did you decide to create a story that celebrates that which grows and lives in wild open spaces?

I think that I actually “wrote” this story when I was a child. I loved the wild places that surrounded my rural childhood home. I spent hours and hours outside exploring those places—the woodlands, meadows, and waterways. It was a magical place and time that made a big impression on me. The elders in my family would take us out to forage for edible plants and fruits like sassafras for tea. There were wild asparagus in the early spring, all kinds of wild berries for pies in the summer, and nuts in the fall that my mother would bake into a cake for Christmas. Being out in nature was always like a treasure hunt for the delightful, the delicious, and the curious. So, when tasked by Prestel to develop a garden themed story, The Wild Garden narrative developed organically as I mined my childhood memories.

Did you name the village of your story Mirren after the Village of Mürren in Switzerland?
 
Is there a Mürren in Switzerland? I had no idea. My Mirren is a totally made-up place. The name just popped into my head. I liked the sound of it. It is a lyrical word. I liked that it almost sounded like mirror. I thought that was useful in the story as the two settings in the book—the wild place and the community garden—share many similarities. In the book I bounce between the two places and compare them to each other. I tried out other names for the village but kept coming back to Mirren.

Picture
© Cynthia Cliff

​Your color palette in THE WILD GARDEN reminds me of redbuds dressed up for Spring! Why did you choose it for this story?
 
I first started by developing a color palette for my main characters to make sure they would stand out against all the greenery in the story. I do have a palette that I tend to use, which felt right—colors that are bright but a bit earthly as well, so I leaned into those inclinations. Nature is colorful and I wanted the book to be colorful too.

Do you, like your main character Jilly, have your own wild place to explore? If so, what do you love about it and how does it inspire or inform your kidlit work?  

These days I do have a favorite local place to hike and go there as often as I can. It is a very large public space that has both grand vistas and small, intimate woody spaces. I enjoy that mix. In my life I’ve been lucky enough to spend time in many amazing wild places, but my very favorite place to hike is in northern Maine along the coast. In that place, the earthy, mossy, and dreamy woodlands run alongside a granite strewn shoreline, which makes these trails full of magic and wonder--a perfect mix of restfulness and energy. When you look closely, you can find tiny flowers, lichens, and all kinds of little creatures every step of the way. This is the kind of place where I like to recharge, explore, and draw. It’s a place that feeds the soul and inspires, which is important for everyone, and especially for creative people.

As you worked with your Prestel Junior editor Doris Kutschbach going from original submitted manuscript to the finished proof, what about the process surprised you, and/or did you enjoy the most?

I guess what surprised me the most was how incredibly hard it is to write a picture book story for children! The general public has no idea. It’s like catching lightening in a bottle, at least that's how it was for me. There were many, many drafts. Doris was so helpful, she offered encouragement and wise advice. For me the most enjoyable part of the process was making the artwork, of course. 
 
Why do you hope kids will enjoy reading your book? Is there a theme or lesson you'd like for them to carry away?

I think the main lesson is about understanding why the wild landscape is important. Those wildflowers, nuts, berries, and mushrooms are food for wild creatures. It is their garden, in a sense. And those little saplings, rocky hillsides, and mossy ponds are their homes. Often, when children are outside, they might not take the time to look around and think about that connection. On another level, a second lesson might be about speaking up to protect what you value and to not be afraid to do so. But it's my hope that the biggest lesson learned will come through kids enjoying and discovering wild places just like Jilly, my main character, does. I hope my book will encourage children everywhere to experience the richness and excitement found in nature, if they take the time to look. 

Wonderful lessons, indeed! Well, thanks so much, Cynthia, for allowing me to shine a spotlight on THE WILD GARDEN and on you today--your Book Launch Day! (WOOT!) Can't wait to read about Jilly's next adventure.

Thanks for having me!

Picture
Cynthia Cliff grew up in a tiny historic village in rural Virginia, surrounded by animals, gardens, and a large extended family. This provided her with a love of history, family, nature, and folklore—themes that find their way into much of her work. Cynthia began her professional illustration career in 2019 after living many other lives. Her first authored and illustrated book PIE FOR BREAKFAST, a baking book for children, came out in 2021. She is represented by Kathleen Rushall at Andrea Brown Literary Agency. Today, you'll find Cynthia residing in Virginia just outside of Washington, D.C., and online at cynthiacliff.com.


Picture
Filled with charmingly rustic illustrations of people, plants and animals, THE WILD GARDEN, written and illustrated by Cynthia Cliff and published on May 3, 2022, by Prestel Junior, is about community and biodiversity introduces children to the variety of ways things can grow and flourish in nature. Purchase your copy today, HERE!

3 Comments

Hooray! Happy Book-Launch Day for THE WILD GARDEN! Meet the Editor

5/3/2022

0 Comments

 
Picture
©Cynthia Cliff, cynthiacliff.com

Welcome! Doris Kutschbach,
Kidlit Editor
​of

Picture

Thanks so much for stopping by, Doris! All the way from Munich, Germany! Hope your trip went well. HAHA!

The smoothest trip ever! I'm delighted, of course, to talk about The Wild Garden, Cynthia's latest picture book with Prestel Junior. 

The delight is all mine! So, when you received Cynthia's submission for THE WILD GARDEN , why did you want to acquire it?
 
I had worked with Cynthia on her first book Pie for Breakfast, which has been published by Prestel Junior in both English and German. For me, it was such a pleasure to work with Cynthia, and I really loved the result of our collaboration, so I knew that I wanted to work with her again. I guess that the idea to make a book about gardening and nature came from me! I believe that a mindful, respectful handling of nature is extremely important for the future of our planet and our children. Saving our planet is such a strong message of our time. Cynthia was excited about the idea. She came up with a range of proposals based around that topic and we developed the book from there.

 What do you love about Cynthia's illustrations found in THE WILD GARDEN?
 
Above everything else I love her fine sense of color and color combinations. How she uses tones, shades, accents and contrasts. Her images are not just colorful. There is a beautiful underlying harmony that ties the illustrations throughout the book together. I also love the attention to detail in her pictures. Each detail tells a little story and children can discover so much. Cynthia seems to understand really well how children view the world.

Picture

I adore Cynthia's color palette too! ​What do you love about the story's characters--Jilly, Bleu and Grandpa--and their love for wild, open spaces?
 
Jilly and her grandfather know their beloved wilderness very well. The story really shows the joy they feel when they're there. It's very nice that they find a clever way to share this joy and love of nature with the other townspeople and bring about a positive change in the way other people think. Their protest is peaceful, friendly and full of empathy--important things in our aggressive times!

So true! Do you have your own wild open space you enjoy? If so, describe what you love about it and what kinds of things you like to 'gather' there.
 
I am fortunate enough to have my own garden! It has old fruit trees and it is a bit overgrown, which means many animals feel comfortable there: insects, hedgehogs, squirrels, toads, newts and birds. My family and I enjoy the garden very much and look forward to fresh organic apples, plums, pears, berries, tomatoes and vegetables. The garden was a great gift, especially during the lockdown. Nature can really ground us and give us a sense of calm in stressful times.

I agree! Why do you hope children everywhere will read this book?
 
I hope that the book will encourage children all over the world to have fun discovering nature, learn mindfulness and understand the importance of protecting our planet. Every child, no matter how small, can make a difference. The book can also help children learn about peaceful communication--which can be applied in so many aspects of life!

I couldn't agree more, Doris. WOW! I have really enjoyed your visit. Thanks so much for allowing me to share in launching THE WILD GARDEN. Or should I say Danke! May it have many more printings!

Picture
​Doris Kutschbach wears many kidlit hats. Besides being a program manager and editorial director at Prestel Junior, she's an art historian who has written several children's books about art, including Art Detective: Spot the Difference. Doris is a passionate amateur gardener who lives with her family in Munich, Germany. You can find Doris's books HERE.


Picture
​​Filled with charmingly rustic illustrations of people, plants and animals, THE WILD GARDEN, written and illustrated by Cynthia Cliff and published on May 3, 2022, by Prestel Junior, is about community and biodiversity introduces children to the variety of ways things can grow and flourish in nature. Purchase your copy today, HERE!
0 Comments

Book Launch Party for THE WILD GARDEN!

5/2/2022

0 Comments

 
Picture
©Cynthia Cliff, cynthiacliff.com

I am super excited to announce that tomorrow I'll be hosting a BOOK LAUNCH PARTY for THE WILD GARDEN, written and illustrated by Cynthia Cliff, and published by Prestel Junior.
WOOT!
I hope you'll join in the celebration! You won't regret getting to know Cynthia and her editor Doris Kutschbach a little better. And please, give a little shout-out by leaving a message in the comments.
On May 4th at 11 AM,  the Book-Launch fun for THE WILD GARDEN will continue as Schuler Books hosts a Facebook Live event with Cynthia engaging young audiences with a virtual storytime. Tune in HERE.

Picture
Filled with charmingly rustic illustrations of people, plants and animals, THE WILD GARDEN, written and illustrated by Cynthia Cliff and published on May 3, 2022, by Prestel Junior, is about community and biodiversity. Sure to delight, it introduces young readers to the variety of ways things can grow and flourish in nature. Purchase your copy today, HERE!
0 Comments

Madelyn Rosenberg & Wendy Shang

1/22/2022

0 Comments

 

Kidlit Writing Duo: Coauthors Extraordinaire

Picture
Courtesy Wendy Shang & Madelyn Rosenberg

Salutations, Wendy & Madelyn! So excited to have you stop by!

We're happy to be here!

I've always wanted to know more about coauthoring books, so thank you for sharing with me how you worked together to write THIS IS JUST A TEST and NOT YOUR ALL-AMERICAN GIRL.

Delighted!

Wendy, I'd like to pick your brain first. 

Shoot!

How did you and Madelyn meet and who came up with the idea that you'd be able to write a book together?

I met Madelyn at the Mid-Atlantic SCBWI conference, back when it was at a church in Arlington and you had to help put away chairs at the end! My first image of Madelyn was her holding an enormous bag of recycling to take home, which, if you know Madelyn, is perfectly fitting. Her books, like TAKE CARE and ONE SMALL HOP, have really strong environmental themes.

As it turned out, I ended up joining a writing group that Madelyn belonged to, and then, as another coincidence, Madelyn and I ended up with the same agent. It seemed like we were destined to be friends. We were starting our writing journeys at the same time, our kids were around the same age, and we both were terrible at playing tennis, so we could play together without anyone feeling bad. 

I started campaigning to write together after I found out that Madelyn had written a book with another friend. I remember thinking, “Huh, you can do that? You can get paid to hang out and write? How do we get in on that?!” 

Very interesting! After coauthoring THIS IS JUST A TEST with Madelyn, why were you excited about working together on your second book, NOT YOUR ALL-AMERICAN GIRL?

When you’re starting a story, you have to make so many decisions, it’s kind of exhausting, right? You have to figure out your character, where they live, what’s going to happen, who their family is, etc. One of the nice things about going back to the same world is that you’ve already gotten a lot of that figured out, so you can focus more on what’s going to happen next. I loved THIS IS JUST A TEST, the way it came together and the way the prose just bounced, so I was excited to return to that world of defined characters (and it’s in the ’80s, so there’s an unmistakable vibe).

I’ll also tell you that when we write together, my goal is to make Madelyn laugh. Not that she’s a hard sell, but Madelyn has really good taste, so if she laughs out loud, I know it’s a keeper. 

Making a friend laugh is a cool thing! What did you enjoy about doing events together, both in-person and virtual ones? 

After working together for so many years, we’ve really developed a comfortable patter together where we can kind of sense when to jump in or throttle back. We didn’t have a joint book come out this year, but we each had a book come out on the same day (again! coincidence!) so we had an online event with One More Page Books. This was one of my favorite events to date because we talked about each other’s books (a distinct improvement over talking about your own book), and then Madelyn had this brilliant idea that we should prepare trivia questions based on the topics in each other’s books, sort of like Wait, Wait, Don’t Tell Me. The audience really loved it. It was kind of a quirky detour from the usual book event, and more than that, you could see we were cracking each other up with these oddball questions. 

It’s not important who got more questions correct. The point is everyone had fun. Okay, fine, it was Madelyn. There will be a rematch. 

Haha! I'm sorry I missed that.

Picture

Time to pick your brain, Madelyn!

Pick away!

Two authors writing a story with one voice and from one character’s POV sounds hard! Did you and Wendy have to spend loads of time outlining each stage of the plot?

You know that age-old question: Are you a plotter or a pantser? For this one, Wendy and I were both “pantsers” so there wasn’t so much outlining. Or, you know, any. We did do some brainstorming. Lots and lots of brainstorming. We took turns writing chapters, but as we wrote, the other person would edit the previous chapter and then move the story forward. Then the next person would come in and edit the edits. Honestly, by the time the book was finished, I feel like we both touched every sentence. Each of us added layers. With each edit, we went deeper into our character and the story. It worked that way with humor, too. With each edit, the other person made it funnier. It was story building in the truest sense.

Whoa! That required a lot of mental muscle and discipline! I reckon, like with exercising, having someone by your side to sweat it out with helps with motivation and staying the course.

For sure!

After coauthoring THIS IS JUST A TEST with Wendy, why were you excited about working together on your second book, NOT YOUR ALL-AMERICAN GIRL?
 
I was excited to get back into that world, of course, and I was also excited to get more time hanging out with Wendy. When we wrote together, we worked on a lot more than just our writing; we worked on our lives. We figured out what to eat for dinner (chicken and dumplings, carnitas), how best to help our kids, how to deal with certain situations without losing it. We need to work on something else because I miss having her voice in my ear every day.

That's so sweet! (I LOVE chicken and dumplings, BTW!) How would you compare the coauthoring experience to writing solo? What part of it do you like better? 

They say you should write books only you can write; as coauthors, we wrote books we could only write together. As a solo writer, it can be a pretty lonely experience, so it was lovely to be able to share my brain. Writing with a partner, it was easier to break through writer’s block because there was someone who had ideas when I was out. We could also talk through things to move our character ahead. There was just less being stuck. And of course, the copy was cleaner because we had both been over it so many times. Also, it’s much easier to promote a book if you’re promoting the work of a friend. I was less self-conscious about saying, “Please read this!” And I’m also so chicken when it comes to reviews. I made Wendy read them first.

So what's NOT YOUR ALL-AMERICAN GIRL about?

It's about Lauren, who is Jewish and Chinese, and used to being the side dish alongside Tara, her best friend. But after Lauren’s audition for her school’s “All-American” musical goes extraordinarily well, Lauren wonders if it’s her turn to be the star. Lauren’s hopes are dashed when the director tells her she doesn’t look the part to play the lead. And who is cast instead? It’s blonde-haired, blue-eyed Tara! Lauren can't bring herself to sing anymore, jeopardizing her role in the ensemble and her friendship with Tara. But with the help of a button-making business, the music of Patsy Cline, and her two bickering grandmothers, Lauren just might find her voice again. 

Considering your backgrounds, I can see why you and Wendy were the perfect coauthors to tell Lauren's story! Well, as fun as it's been, I reckon it's time to go. Thank you both for being here. It was great fun learning about your process. And do let us know when Book 3 comes out!

Our pleasure, and will do!

Picture
​To learn more about NOT YOUR ALL-AMERICAN GIRL, a middle-grade full of heart and hilarity that explores what it truly means to be all-American, check out these reviews: HERE, HERE and HERE.

Picture
​Wendy Shang is the author of several books for children, including The Great Wall of Lucy Wu, which won the Asian Pacific American Librarian Association Award for Children’s Literature. Wendy's latest picture book illustrated by Lorian Tu is entitled  The Rice in the Pot Goes Round and Round, released this past fall by Orchard Books, an imprint of Scholastic, Learn more about Wendy at wendyshang.com.

Madelyn Rosenberg 
is the author of a dozen books for children, including One Small Hop, a Junior Library Guild selection, and Cyclops of Central Park, a picture book about seeing the world that came out just when the pandemic began and we couldn’t. You can find Madelyn online at squealermusic.com.

0 Comments

Getting to Know Tom Angleberger

1/21/2022

0 Comments

 

​Jedi of School Visits


Picture
Courtesy Tom Angleberger

Hi, Tom! I am superdy-dooperdy delighted to have you here on my blog! Thanks oodles for stopping by!

You're welcome, Dionna. Happy to be here!

I must confess, while being present during one of your author visits, I was absolutely amazed at your ability to fill the room with electric-fun! The kids were soooo excited to engage with you (and your character drawings). It was obvious to me that you love doing school visits!

You're right. I absolutely love doing school visits! 

Any advice for us kidlit creators who might be hesitant about doing school visits, or who are afraid of boring the kids to tears?

First, I'd say, don't view doing school visits as an obligation. View them as an unmatched opportunity of getting energized by kids! I recommend doing them even for authors who are just getting started. View your visit as a chance to just talk to kids about books, writer's block, or whatever else the kids want to talk about. If you're not ready for a whole gym-full, try talking to a single class or even a small book club. 

Picture
Courtesy Tom Angelberger

​What message do you try to get across to the kids while doing a visit?

I don't think educating is my purpose at all. My job is to energize everybody—to read, to write, to draw. The kids don't need to remember anything I said as long as they remember that I have a great time making stories and they can, too.

Since the Pandemic, have you missed doing in-person school visits? How have virtual visits worked out for you?
​
I do miss the in-school visits, but I don't miss the travel and hassles that can go with it. It can be absolutely exhausting, especially at schools with bad microphones. I do not miss the bad microphones! But I totally miss the direct connection with the kids.

Virtual visits have their technology problems, too. But now that EVERYBODY knows how to use Zoom, it's a lot different than the days when I might be the first Skype visit a school had ever had. Also, I can do so many more visits in one day! I think my record is twelve in one day! But six is a much better number. Meanwhile, four in-person visits in one day are too many.

Twelve Zoom visits in a single day? That’s incredible! What works for you when doing an in-school visit? What doesn't?

I don't think the hard sell works. Don't try to be a commercial for your book. Instead, be a champion of reading in general!

Something that works great is this: “I love to write books, but I also love to READ books. I'm looking for a new one to read, can anybody tell me about their favorite book?”
 
Using a white board, you can either make a list or make a mash-up drawing with characters from each book. I tell kids I'm going to take the list to the library so I know what to check out. They are SO excited to tell me what to read next. (And, of course, it's a lot of fun to pretend I've never heard of the books or that I've misunderstood the title.)

Tom, it’s been so fun having you here! Thank you so much for sharing some school-visit tips, and please, do tell your talented wife CeCe Bell I said “Hi!” and congrats on El Deafo becoming a cartoon series! 

It’s been my pleasure! And will do.

PictureDrawn by Jonathan Todd
Tom Angleberger is an author-illustrator with more than thirty books to his name. His Origami Yoda series is so deliciously packed full of fun that kids have gobbled them up by the millions. (Thankfully, the books don’t reciprocate.) His pen of choice is the Pilot G2 gel roller, 1.0 for everyday doodling, and the .7 for illustrating Origami Yoda. Tom gets inspiration from Star Wars, Fumiaki Kawahata, Daniel Pinkwater, and his own social disasters. Tom’s superpowers include Asperger’s and making a room full of preteens roar with laughter during school visits. His latest books include titles in his Geronimo Stilton and DJ Funkyfoot graphic novel series and in his Didi Dodo, Future Spy chapter book series set in the Flytrap Files universe. HIs graphic novel Two-Headed Chicken will be released this year by Walker Books US. His latest kidlit news (and how to fold an origami Yoda) can be found at origamiyoda.com.

0 Comments

Welcome, Colleen Muske, kidlit author & illustrator!

1/10/2022

4 Comments

 
Picture
(c) Colleen Muske, colleenmuske.com

Welcome, Collen, to my blog! I'm so excited to introduce everyone to you, Kelly Dyksterhouse's newest Kidlit Raven!

Thanks, Dionna, for having me here. Being part of Raven Quill Literary is a dream come true!

It's a great welcoming place, for sure. So tell me, how did you find your way into becoming a kidlit author-illustrator?

I've always been an artist. I tried everything to share my art with the world, from making bags and purses, home décor, murals, etc. One day my husband was watching the news and they had a segment on Jan Brett. He said, "Hey, you should do that." Until that moment I didn't even think of a children's book illustrator as a job. About a month later, I received a mailing for classes at Minneapolis College of Art and Design, where I would occasionally take classes. They were offering a Children's Book Illustration class and I thought it was so serendipitous. From the first class I was hooked. I have never tried to do anything with my art other than children's books since that moment in 2006/2007.

Serendipitous, indeed! What happened next?

As for the writing part, it naturally evolved after learning to tell a story visually. I started taking classes at The Loft Literary Center in Minneapolis. They offer lots of classes about writing for children and now (silver lining to COVID) you can take them online! I joined a critique group online and then a local group formed from one of the Loft classes. We still meet once a week and Lindsey McDivitt and Cynthia Surissi are both members. Our critique group is amazing and so helpful, keeping me motivated to generate new material. 

Learning from and being supported by others is truly a part of the kidlit journey! 

Yes it is!

Picture
​(c) Colleen Muske, colleenmuske.com

​What do you love about producing work with children in mind?

I will try and not sound like a sap when I say this, but it is truly the best thing! Children are so imaginative and observant. They love to learn new things, as do I. It's such a challenge to write for children, you can't be lazy, they notice everything. I really love the thought of one of my books connecting with a child and making them feel something. I love trying to tell a story in 500 words (or less). It's so hard. Also, I've learned my stories have to have heart and a sense of hope, even for a tough subject, or they just won't work for young readers. 

How is being an illustrator of children's stories especially fun for you?
 
Whether I am illustrating my story or someone else's, adding a visual backstory for kids is a lot of fun. I have to push beyond where I am comfortable to keep up with their imaginations. I love finding details in a book where every time you read it you discover new things in the illustration, and I think kids love that too. 

I agree! So how did you and Kelly find each other, and why are you glad?

I've been working on Kelly for a while! Cynthia first suggested I submit to Kelly after I parted ways with my first agent. I was getting really nice rejections, but could never get over the getting-acquired road bump. I really needed an agent to find the right home for my stories. When Kelly mentioned she was looking for an author/illustrator, Cynthia reminded her I was both (Isn't Cynthia the best!!!). I feel so lucky to have a friend who is such a great cheerleader for my work. This time I sent Kelly a couple of dummy books and it worked! YAY!!! 

Congrats! Kelly is great!

To be honest, I'd been watching Kelly do her thing as an agent for years. Since she represents two people in my critique group, I saw her feedback and suggestions frequently. She always has such insightful, helpful things to say about a manuscript. I've been impressed with her for a long time! I knew I needed someone editorial, organized, and someone who could make a plan for my career. Kelly is all of those things and more. And she is sooooooo nice!

You're right about that! Well, thanks for stopping by. And do let us know when your work is finally acquired!

Will do, and thanks for having me!!

Picture
Colleen Muske is a children’s book writer and illustrator. She has been writing poems and drawing horses as long as she can remember. But it wasn’t until she took a picture book illustration class 15 years ago that she knew she'd finally found her calling. Her love of nature and animals is an endless source of inspiration for her art and writing. Colleen likes to use dynamic colors, with lots of print and texture in her illustrations, and paints using gouache, watercolor, and Photoshop. She loves to write picture books and middle grade. She has a horse named Gus Gus, three Shiba Inus, and two cats. They have all inspired a few stories! When she’s not writing or illustrating, Colleen likes cooking, baking, interior design, watching documentaries, and spending time with her horse. Colleen and her husband just moved into a 139-year-old cottage in Stillwater, Minnesota and are DIY enthusiasts, which explains their daily trips to the hardware store. Colleen is represented  by Kelly Dyksterhouse. Find Collen online at colleenmuske.com.


Picture

4 Comments

Saying Goodbye to a Five-Year-Old Friend

10/15/2021

34 Comments

 
Picture

2017-2021 Highlighter team drawn by AMY MULLEN, mintparcel.com

HIGHLIGHTER
Ezine Serving the Mid-Atlantic Region of SCBWI


After five years of  curating the content for the Highlighter, the ezine serving the  Mid-Atlantic region of SCBWI, I've decided to hand my precious baby over to another caretaker. It was a hard decision. I so enjoyed discovering (and uncovering) all the amazingness that belongs to the collective of kidlit creators that live in my neck of the woods.

Each quarter there were so many amazing books being published! So many awards being won! So many industry professionals to learn from! And I attempted to capture it all in our SCBWI newsletter! A maddening thing to attempt for a volunteer, but I tried. Hearing our members express appreciation and gratitude many issues over, made it worthwhile. 

I was blown away when as a thank you the amazing Meg Medina had her publisher send me a copy of her lovely book EVELYN DEL REY IS MOVING AWAY, and when the talented Jacqueline Jules did something likewise! How cool is that!

Curating the content for an amazing SCBWI publication for five years!


Honestly, I won't miss spending all those tremendous amount of volunteer hours obsessing over every feature, every article, every iota of member good news. But I will miss working with ​my amazing coeditors, Susan VanHecke (who rocks socks with her red pen), and Tami Traylor (who rocks all things layout and design). They are simply FANTABULOUS.

Our final issue--the Fall 2021 Highlighter--includes:
  • a fun article about school visits with Tom Angleberger
  • a partnership piece with coauthors Wendy Shang and Madelyn Rosenberg
  • an author spotlight on Kathryn Erskine
  • a Meet-the-Artist segment with Robert Meganck
  • an article by Gabriella Aldeman about our members' books being produced for the stage and screen
  • a craft article by me about lessons learned from watching the reality show Chopped, and so much more!

Find it for download below!
MidAtlantic SCBWI Highlighter, Issue 20, Fall 2021.pdf
File Size: 4825 kb
File Type: pdf
Download File


Goodbye, HIGHLIGHTER, my five-year-old friend.
Every one of your issues took my breath away.
Live long & prosper in the hands of another!


34 Comments

Welcome, Lindsey McDivitt!

10/12/2021

0 Comments

 

Lindsey McDivitt, Kidlit Creator 


Picture

Welcome, Lindsey, to the final day of my blog party, celebrating Raven Quill's mini-flock that belongs to the amazing Kelly Dyksterhouse!

Huge thanks Dionna! Glad to be here. It's been wonderful learning more about the other members of Kelly's Crew!

I've enjoyed it, too! Now, your turn. How'd you get interested in writing for kids?

An especially challenging year in my life that got me writing--the abrupt loss of my healthcare job and coping with my mom's terminal illness in the middle of Minnesota's winter. I'd long wanted to write, but mainly procrastinated by reading books on the craft. But the burning need to escape the house led to hours in busy, cozy coffee shops and actual attempts at writing. It was stumbling onto picture books filled with stereotypes of older people that prompted me to try writing picture books with a more accurate, upbeat account of the aging process. 

Upbeat While Aging--that's my metaphorical work-in-progress! Are there any other topics that excite you, the author?

I've known so many fantastic, older role models and I'm totally drawn to reading and writing about people that have enjoyed the different stages of their lives. It's very inspiring to realize a person accomplished something in later life that absolutely required the life experience they'd acquired. I'm also drawn to topics related to nature, to our environment and our changing world.

Seeing Nana compete in the Senior Olympics would inspire a kid, to be sure! So what do you love about working with Kelly?

I feel incredibly fortunate to be represented by Kelly. Cynthia Surrisi, another client of Kelly's, introduced us. Lucky me! One thing I love about Kelly is how talented she is at helping me fine tune my picture book manuscripts. She unerringly puts her finger on things that bothered me about the manuscript, albeit subconsciously! Each manuscript has been so improved by Kelly's knowledge of writing and the current market.

I agree. Kelly knows her stuff! Well, thank so much for closing out our blog party. It's been super fun "meeting" everyone. Don't make yourself a stranger. 

I won't! Thanks again for hosting the party.

Picture

Lindsey McDivitt  is the author of A PLAN FOR THE PEOPLE: NELSON MANDELA'S HOPE FOR HIS NATION (2021; Eerdmans Books for Young Readers), NATURE'S FRIEND: THE GWEN FROSTIC STORY, and TRUTH AND HONOR: THE PRESIDENT FORD STORY (Sleeping Bear Press). CHRISTMAN FAIRIES FOR OUMA will release in 2022 from Familius Books. You will find Lindsey at lindseymcdivitt.com where she reviews picture books with accurate images of aging and older adults on her blog A is for Aging. 


0 Comments

BLOG PARTY! Meet Kelly's KidLit Crew Member

10/11/2021

0 Comments

 

C. M. Surrisi 


Picture

Kidlit Member 
of 
Kelly's Crew


Greetings, C.M.! Big WOOT! for stopping by, despite your crazy editing schedule right now.

No problem. No raven left behind, right?

Exactly! So, how'd you get interested in writing for kids?

I was a born mimic. From the first time a picture book was put in my hands I wanted to copy the drawings. As soon as I learned to read, I wanted to write my own stories. In third grade, I filled spiral notebooks with stories of two sisters who solved mysteries of missing crayons and cookies. I see, I read, and I want to make. I particularly dug in to middle grade and identified with the outsider-girls. I do not connect with the term "popular." So, making stories for the rest of us has been my joy. And I love a good pager turner, so mystery is a fun challenge. I love introducing kids to a genre that they can continue to enjoy as an adult.

A well-spun mystery makes for a great read. What subject excites the author in you?

I am one of those people who'd test smack dab in the middle of the left-brain/right-brain function scale. That probably explains why, when I practiced law, I wanted to sing and dance my opening statements in trials. That also translates into wildly diverse interests as a writer. At the moment I am working on two books that will be published in ’22 and ’23. One is a YA non-fiction on a female Viking warrior, and the other is MG fiction on fangirls and influencers. I have written picture books, a MG mystery series, YA non-fiction, and an adult mystery! If there is a rule about having a groove, it's not for me. 

I think more trial lawyers should dance and sing! Sounds like the workings of a whole-brain kind of gal!  Do tell, how did you find Kelly Dyksterhouse as an agent, and what do you love about working with her?

Kelly and I were in the same MFA class at Vermont College of Fine Arts. We ate too many carbs together at Dewey Hall, laughed in the wine pit, cried on laundry day, and experienced all the joy that is that program. We became great friends and I met her family and watched her children grow up. I know her to be a lovely, principled person, a great mom, and community member. She’s a superb writer and fabulous editor. When she told me she was considering becoming an agent, I immediately knew my work was a good fit for her, and she would be a great addition to the agenting side of the kidlit community. I love that she is committed to transparency, nurturing, and finding great matches.  We make a great team!

You've got the inside scoop on all things Kelly, sounds like. Well, thanks again for hopping on over during my blog party. So glad you made it!

Glad to be here.

Picture
C. M. Surrisi is the author of THE BEST MOTHER, a Junior Library Guild Gold Standard picture book selection, and of The Quinnie Boyd Mysteries, an Agatha-nominated series for middle grade readers. C. M. practiced law for many years before pursing an MFA at Vermont College of Fine Arts. Since her graduation, she has taught writing in UNC’s Great Smokies Writing Program, as well as many SCBWI and librarian conferences. She is a member of the Author’s Guild, Mystery Writers of America, and The National League of American Pen Women, and is the current president of the Minnesota chapter of Sisters in Crime. She lives on five acres in Minnesota with her husband, loveable Cavalier King Charles spaniel, Sunny, and two incorrigible cats, Cosmo and Casper. C. M. is rep'd by Kelly Dyksterhouse. 
Watch for her two new books, BONE QUAKE: AWAKENING A FEMALE VIKING WARRIOR from Chicago Review Press in 2022, and  THE UNOFFICIAL LOLA BAY FAN CLUB from Putnam in 2023. 
C. M. is rep'd by Kelly Dyksterhouse of The Tobias Literary Agency.

0 Comments

BLOG PARTY! Meet Kelly's KidLit Crew Member

10/10/2021

0 Comments

 

Tom Birdseye


Picture

Kidlit Member
of
Kelly's Crew


Hi, Tom! Delighted you could make it to Day Ten of our Blog Party!

Glad to have made it!

So how did you find your way into becoming a kidlit author and why do you love it?

Unlike many writers who were born with a book in their hands and always love to read, I had trouble learning to decode text on a page, and was not drawn to books as a kid. Reading was hard enough, but writing? It was my least favorite subject—all of that spelling and grammar and punctuation stuff. The best way to spend time at school, as far as I was concerned, was on the playground at recess. It wasn't until I was in my early 20's that I got bitten by the reading bug, and early 30's when the writing bug struck. I've been scratching those itches ever since.
 
It's a scratch that must be itched (or is it the other way around?) Do share! What project of the heart have you been scratching out recently?

I've just started a new YA, tentatively titled Blowup. It's about 17-year-old Riley Lowe, a sensitive, good-hearted kid who, in a moment of teen brainlessness, throws an M-80 off the bridge into Salvation Creek Canyon, and starts a wildfire that blows up and threatens everything he loves. As you can see, it's a comedy . . . 

Kidding. Although not completely. I find that life, even when it's hard and is pushing us to the point of breaking, inevitably has funny moments in it. To leave those out of a story would paint only a partial picture of the human struggle to overcome adversity. It's not just about me, the author, providing a bit of comic relief, giving the reader a break from the intensity of conflict; it's about depicting characters living life fully, in all of its nuances, including humor. 

A tragicomedy for teens? Sounds like something teens will really enjoy reading. What do you love about working with Kelly Dyksterhouse of Raven Quill Literary?

After 30+ years with another agency, the culture there shifted and I realized it was time to go. I wanted a smaller, more intimate, hands-on agency, and an agent that was aligned with my sense of literary aesthetics. Kelly fit the bill perfectly. She has fantastic editorial chops, and is diplomatically relentless in her expectations, guiding every step of the way. She brings out the best in me. Working with her has been everything I hoped for. I could not be more happy with the change. 

Change can often be good for the soul! Well, thanks again for hopping on over! I've enjoyed having you!

Happy to acquiesce! 

Picture
​Tom Birdseye was decidedly uninterested in writing as a kid – or any academic aspect of school, for that matter – never imagining that he would eventually become a published author.  And yet nineteen titles later – novels, picture books, and nonfiction – that is exactly what has happened. His work has been recognized for its excellence by the International Reading Association, Children’s Book Council, National Council of Social Studies, Society of School Librarians International, Oregon Library Association, and Oregon Reading Association, among others. Combined, his books have either won or been a finalist for state children’s choice awards 43 times. Life, it seems, is full of who’d-a-thought-its. He lives and writes in Corvallis, Oregon, but launches mountaineering expeditions to his beloved Cascades on a regular basis. Tom is represented by Kelly Dyksterhouse of The Tobias Literary Agency. Visit him online at tombirdseye.com.

0 Comments

BLOG PARTY! Meet Kelly's KidLit Crew Member

10/9/2021

0 Comments

 

Nedda Lewers​


Picture

Kidlit Member
of
Kelly's Crew


​Welcome, Nedda, to Day Nine of my Blog Party! I'm super honored to have you here!

Thank you for asking me to participate!

How did you find your way to becoming a kidlit author and what do you love about it?

My path to writing kidlit began during a time of extreme change in my life. I had just moved across the country to California with my husband and children. After many joyous years of teaching early childhood, I decided to take a step back from the classroom to help my daughters acclimate to their new home. But while they were at school, I was left wondering, “What about me? What do I do now?” That’s when I decided to fulfill a goal that had always been on my bucket list—writing a novel.

Since I was young, writing has always been a powerful creative outlet and means for processing the highs and lows of life. So it wasn’t a surprise that I was turning to it again when I was feeling lost. I knew right away that whatever I ended up writing would be for kids. Both as a teacher and a mother, I have learned way more from children than I’ve taught. Their journeys, coupled with my own childhood experiences, were begging to make their way onto the page.  

Nicely put! Do tell about the project of the heart that you queried to agents, the one that snagged Kelly Dyksterhouse's heart? 

Happy to share! It's a middle-grade fantasy inspired by my experience growing up as a second-generation Egyptian-American and by the Arabic folktales I heard as a child. Fantasy and adventure stories have always been my favorites as a reader. Bring on all the important themes, but entertain me first. While my novel explores issues, i.e., identity, family, and home, my main focus has always been to write a fun story filled with twists and turns. 

I can't wait to read it! What made you decide to sign with Kelly?

I recently signed with Kelly, so the reasons I chose her are fresh in my mind. First and foremost, I was blown away by Kelly’s understanding of what I set out to do with my novel. It’s like she was in my head. Her attention to detail also impressed me. There were elements in the story I labored over to get just right that she astutely picked up on. She also cares greatly about getting meaningful books in the hands of children. As a teacher and parent, this was very important to me. 

Thanks for sharing! Do let us know when your book is acquired!

Will do, and thanks again for interviewing me on your blog.

Picture
Nedda Lewers  grew up in Queens, NY where she spent many Sundays at the local library deciding how many books she could possibly carry on the fifteen-minute walk home. Every summer, she visited Cairo, where her parents are from, getting to know her big extended family. Even though it wasn’t always easy having one foot in America and the other in Egypt, she cherishes how that experience has made her perspective richer and more expansive. She strives to create books that take children on fun adventures with characters who are also trying to make sense of the big, complicated world and their place in it. Nedda has an MSEd from Bank Street and has enjoyed a career of learning from her early childhood students. She is an active member of SCBWI, the #MGPies writing group, and is an Author Mentor Match mentee. Her current middle-grade novel was longlisted for the 2021 WriteMentor Children’s Novel Award. Needa, tweeting @NeddaLewers, is rep'd by Kelly Dyksterhouse of The Tobias Literary Agency.

0 Comments

BLOG PARTY! Meet Kelly's KidLit Crew Member

10/8/2021

0 Comments

 

Deborah Diner


Picture

Kidlit Member
of
Kelly's Crew


Hi, Deborah! Thanks for coming!

Hi, Dionna! Thanks for throwing this party for us! 

Do tell, please, how did you find your way to becoming a kidlit author? 

To be honest, I'm not completely sure what drove me to become a writer. It has always felt so natural to me, I've never seriously questioned why I'm willing to wake up early every morning to scratch out stories before work! But, I know exactly why I have chosen to write for children. They are the dream audience--open-minded, enthusiastic, curious, and brutally honest. As a teacher, my favorite part of the day is when I read out loud to my students and see the pure delight of their reactions to a well-crafted story. My dream is to one day write the book that makes students ask, "Is it read-aloud time, yet?"

Do you have a project of the heart you're working on?

The manuscript I have currently on submission was definitely a work of the heart--a middle grade fantasy story based on Jewish mythology and folklore. When I was a kid, Jewish characters in children's literature were confined almost entirely to historical fiction, in stories of pogroms, immigration, and the Holocaust. While those stories are incredibly important, I was aching for Jewish characters in the fantasy and science fiction books I loved best. Today there's a growing movement of Jewish fantasy, and diverse Jewish characters across all genres, that I would be so honored to be part of.

Sounds exciting! So, what do you love about being represented by Kelly Dyksterhouse?

What don't I love about working with Kelly? From the beginning, she has been so supportive of me and my strange little manuscript. She's given me the feedback I needed to elevate my book to the next level, but she's never made me feel like I have to change in order to be successful. Because this is my debut manuscript, I'm still learning the ropes of the publishing process, and she has been so patient in answering my questions and making sure I feel comfortable about the decisions we're making. I really couldn't imagine a better experience!

Thanks for stopping by, and do let us know when your manuscript is being released!

Will do, and thanks for having me! 

Picture
Deborah Diner was born into a military family, and grew up moving all over the country. She has always loved books and words, and wanted to be a writer even before she could read. Some of her earliest memories are of dictating stories to her mother, who typed them up and bound them into her first published books. In college, Deborah continued developing her writing as she studied English, astronomy, and elementary education at the University of Virginia. She currently teaches fourth grade in Winchester, Virginia. When she is not working on her writing, she enjoys embroidery, playing the violin, and indoor rock climbing. Represented by Kelly Dyksterhouse of The Tobias Literary Agency, you'll find Deborah online at  deborahdiner.com. 

0 Comments

BLOG PARTY! Meet Kelly's KidLit Crew Member

10/7/2021

0 Comments

 

Leslie Stall Widener


Picture

Kidlit Member
of
Kelly's Crew


Salutations! Leslie, and welcome!

Happy to stop by!

How did you find your way to becoming a kidlit author, and what do you love about it?

I started out as an illustrator, something I'd wanted to do since I was very young, but along the way I became interested in writing, too. Illustration is very time consuming and I've always had a day job. The work was every evening and weekend until the job was finished. What I love about writing is it's a creative endeavor that I can pursue anytime, anywhere.

I've always wished I could illustrate! So what project of the heart are you working on?

I started working on a historical novel about 8 years ago. It's centering around the experiences of Choctaw people during the time of removal and resettlement in the 1830's

I was just researching a little about that time period. History is fraught with injustice, isn't it.

Yes, it is. 

What do you love about working with Kelly?

I can tell that Kelly loves what she does, and that she believes in me. I can't imagine having anyone else as my agent!

Thanks, Leslie, for participating in my blog party!

No problem, Dionna. Glad to do it! 

Picture
Leslie Stall Widener, a member of the Choctaw Nation of Oklahoma, grew up in Tulsa and was a regular at her neighborhood library and the summertime bookmobile, although she had a problem with the limited number of books she was allowed to take home. Having an artistic mother meant that art was a big part of her childhood and she decided early in life that she wanted to be a children’s book illustrator. Only in the last decade did she start writing seriously and begin to learn as much as possible about the craft of writing. Leslie and her husband have three grown children and live in a 110-year-old farmhouse in North Texas. They frequently make getaway trips to her family’s Oklahoma homeplace, her maternal grandmother’s original Choctaw land allotment. Leslie, online at lesliestallwidener.com, is rep'd by Kelly Dyksterhouse of The Tobias Literary Agency.

0 Comments

BLOG PARTY! Kelly's KidLit Crew Member

10/6/2021

0 Comments

 

Ashley Walker


Picture

Kidlit Member
of
Kelly's Crew


Salutations, Ashley! So happy to feature you here during Day Six of my Blog Party!

Excited to he here!

Please, tell. How did you find your way into becoming a kidlit author and why do you love it?

I'm a kidlit author with a confession: I didn't read much as a child. Instead, I climbed trees and tracked butterflies and dreamed about flying to the moon. By age five, I'd set my sights on becoming an astronaut, and I pursued that goal all the way through college. But as I squinted up at my engineering degree, I saw that I'd become too near-sighted to pilot a ship to far-off places. So, I flew (coach) to grad school and started work in robotics, determined to launch something, if not myself. Oddly enough, that's where my interest in writing began.

Interesting! Tell more!

Science requires a lot of reading and reporting, and I was slow at those tasks due to what I later learned was dyslexia, but I eventually found my way into the world of academic literature. Eventually, paper writing became a source of joy and pride. Though I never built a robot to visit mysterious other worlds, I used machines to model mysteries of this terrestrial one, including honeybee navigation, bat sonar, and whale songs. My interest in these topics didn't stop when I left academia to nurse a sick kid back to health. That's when I started thinking about exploring science and technology in kidlit.

Fast forward many years (and manuscript drafts), and I'm a Raven Quill Literary Agency author! What I love about writing for young people is that I can approach topics in many different ways—inside a novel with a beating heart, as creative nonfiction, across picture book spreads and comic book panels. And I'm always thinking about ways to engage young people (like my kid-self) who are reluctant to read.

What project of the heart are you working on?
 
This year, I've divided my time between two totally different projects of the heart. One is an MG novel about loyalty and loss and ligers (captive big cats). The idea came to me nearly ten years ago, and figuring out how to make the story catch fire has required patience and vulnerability. But the book is now on submission! My other project is a YA biography collection that I proposed to a publisher just ten months ago. It has required action and organization (to make connections with pioneering women in the music industry). I'm writing with a friend and fellow music lover, Maureen Charles, and we're excited to share these inspiring bios with young readers next year. Music Mavens will be published by Chicago Review Press in fall 2022. 

CONGRATS! What do you love about working with Kelly Dyksterhouse of Raven Quill Literary?

In an interview on this very blog, Kelly said, "I think that a true writer is someone who is always growing their craft." One of the many things I love about working with Kelly is her commitment to career development. Kelly shares craft resources and book recommendations with her "mini flock." She offers imaginative insight about new work and detailed feedback on finished drafts. I lost count of how many times Kelly read my MG novel during a recent revision, but her comments were always supportive and spot-on!

I also have to highlight Kelly's community spirit. When I arrived (virtually) at the agency in the long winter of 2020, the birds-of-a-feather culture I found there was such a surprise and delight. The agents host Zoom hangouts. The authors meet in Slack and FB groups. And everyone’s deals, awards, and book birthdays are celebrated. Participation in RQLA's many group activities is optional, of course, but for me, this connection has become an essential piece of support in my writing life. And I'm so grateful to Kelly and the other agents for making the "nest" such a warm and friendly place. 

A nurturing place to land, to be sure! Well, thanks for participating in my blog party.

Absolutely! Thanks for having me!

Picture
Ashley Walker has been a primary school librarian, grad school lecturer, pilot, programmer, and foster parent to a litter of opossums. But her favorite job is the one she's doing now—writing. Ashley is a recent graduate of the MFA program in Writing for Children and Young Adults at Vermont College of Fine Arts, where she was a three-time award winner. She also holds degrees in Mechanical Engineering from U.C. Berkeley (BS) and Artificial Intelligence from the University of Edinburgh (MSc and PhD). Passionate about children's literature, art, and science, Ashley supports youth projects in Girl Scouts of America, the San Francisco Zoo, and the Young Inklings Society. Ashley, on Twitter at @vashleywalker, is rep'd by Kelly Dyksterhouse of The Tobias Literary Agency.

0 Comments
<<Previous
Forward>>

    About Me

    I am a children's book author who loves learning about lesser known individuals shining in the margins of African American history. My debut novel for young readers, Mama's Chicken & Dumplings (Margaret Ferguson Books, 2024), received a starred review from Shelf Awareness and is a Junior Library Guild Gold Selection. I am 
    represented by Kelly Dyksterhouse of The Tobias Literary Agency.


    Copying, reposting, or otherwise republishing anything on this blog without permission is strictly prohibited.

    Picture

    Picture

    Picture

    Picture

    Picture

    Picture

    Picture

    Picture

    Picture

    Picture

    Picture

    Picture

    Archives

    October 2025
    September 2025
    July 2025
    April 2025
    March 2025
    January 2025
    December 2024
    November 2024
    October 2024
    August 2024
    July 2024
    June 2024
    May 2024
    April 2024
    March 2024
    January 2024
    December 2023
    September 2023
    August 2023
    July 2023
    June 2023
    May 2023
    February 2023
    January 2023
    December 2022
    November 2022
    September 2022
    August 2022
    June 2022
    May 2022
    January 2022
    October 2021
    September 2021
    June 2021
    February 2021
    December 2020
    September 2020
    August 2020
    July 2020
    May 2020
    April 2020
    March 2020
    February 2020
    January 2020
    December 2019
    September 2019
    August 2019
    July 2019
    June 2019
    May 2019
    February 2019
    January 2019
    October 2018
    August 2018
    July 2018
    April 2018
    February 2018
    December 2017
    August 2017
    July 2017
    June 2017
    May 2017
    February 2017
    October 2016
    September 2016
    August 2016
    July 2016
    May 2016
    April 2016
    March 2016
    January 2016
    November 2015
    October 2015
    September 2015
    August 2015
    July 2015
    February 2015
    May 2014
    March 2014
    September 2013
    July 2013
    May 2013

    Categories

    All
    1935 Labor Day Hurricane
    1935 Vinegar Hill Charlottesville VA
    2024
    2025
    Abigail Halpin
    A Big Mooncake For Little Star
    Abrams Books For Young Readers
    Adriann Ranta Zurhellen
    African American Business Owners 1930s
    African Art By Children
    Aladdin Pix
    Albert Whitman & Company
    Alexandra S.D. Hinrichs
    Alfred A. Knopf
    Alice Ratterree
    Alvina Ling
    Alyssa Bermudez
    Amanda Vacharat
    Amy Harding
    Amy Lee-Tai
    Andrea Beatriz Arango
    Andrea Brown Literary
    Angela Dominguez
    Angie Arnett
    Angie Miles
    Angie Smibert
    Anna Lapera
    Anna Staniszewski
    Anne Marie Pace
    Anne Moore Armstrong
    Annual Virginia Book Events
    A POEM GROWS INSIDE YOU
    Arrows
    Arthur Levine Books
    Art-Themed Challenges
    Ashley Spires
    Ashley Walker
    Autism Picture Book
    Awards
    Bagram Ibatoulline
    Balzer + Bray
    Barb McNally
    Barb Rosenstock
    Beach Lane Books
    Ben Franklin's Big Splash
    Best Book Of The Year
    BIRD NERD
    Blink YA Books
    Blog Hop
    Blog Parties
    Board Books
    BO AT THE BUZZ
    Book Launch
    Book Launch Parties
    Booklists
    Book Trailers
    Boyds Mills And Kane
    Boyds Mills Press
    BRAVE BALLERINA
    Brenda Woods
    Brian Rock
    Bright Literary Agency
    Brown Books For Young Readers
    Busy Eyed Day
    Busy-Eyed Day
    Calkin's Creek
    Callie C. Miller
    Candlewick Press
    Capstone
    Carina Povarchik
    Caroline McPherson
    Cetologist
    Changes In Publishing
    Charlie & Frog
    Charlottesville Illustrator
    Charlottesville Indie Bookstore
    Charlotteville
    Chronicle Books
    Clarion Books
    C. M. Surrisi
    Colleen Muske
    Colleen Paeff
    Comic Book Creator
    Commerce Street Books
    Confetti Kids
    Content Editor
    Coping Skills School-aged Children
    Copyeditors
    Cover Reveal
    Coyote Moon
    Craft Of Storytelling
    Craft Of Writing
    Crenshaw
    Cricket Magazine Contributor
    Critiquing
    Crossover
    Cyndi Marko
    Cynthia Cliff
    Daniel Bernstrom
    Daniel Nayeri
    Dave Mottram
    Dawn P. Noren
    DC KidLit Events
    Deaf Main Characters
    Deborah Diner
    Deborah Lakritz
    Deborah Prum
    Diana Ma
    Dionna Mann
    Dish Up A Reading Delight
    Disney-Hyperion
    Dolores Andral
    Donna & Libby Farrell
    Don Tate
    Doris Kutschbach
    Ebony Glenn
    Eerdmans Books For Young Readers
    Elliott Smith
    Engaging The Audience
    Erica Perl
    Erin Murphy
    Erin Murphy Literary Agency
    Ethan Suspended
    Eucalyptus Tree
    EVELYN DEL REY IS MOVING AWAY
    Farrar Straus And Giroux
    Fearless Public Speaking
    Feiwel & Friends
    Felicia Macheske
    Fine Art Raven Photographer
    Flashlight Night
    Fort Building Time
    Foundry Literary + Media
    Four Beautiful Picture Book Biographies
    Fran Cannon Slayton
    Frann Preston Gannon
    Frann Preston-Gannon
    Fred Koehler
    From My Notes
    Garvey's Choice
    Getty Publications
    GIFTS OF THE MAGPIE
    Good Illustration Ltd.
    Grace Lin
    Grammar Tip
    Great Nocturnal Book For Kids
    Growing Up Pedro
    Hannah Barnaby
    HarperCollins
    HB Steadham
    Heather Brockman Lee
    Heather Mullaly
    Highlighter SCBWI Mid-Atlantic Newsletter
    Historical Fiction
    Holiday House Books
    Holly Webb
    Holt Books For Young Readers
    Houghton Mifflin Harcourt
    How To Draw A Lion
    I Love My Library
    Interviews
    Iris Deppe
    IVELIZ EXPLAINS IT ALL
    Jack Keely
    Jacqueline Jules
    Jacques Kaufmann
    Jacqui Lipton
    Jefferson School
    Jen Malia
    Jennifer Ann Richter
    Jennifer Elvgren
    Jennifer Laughran
    Jennifer Unter
    Jen Shulman
    Jess Brailler
    Jessica Sinsheimer
    Jewell Parker Rhodes
    Joanie Stone
    Joanne Lew-Vriethoff
    John Parra
    John-platt
    Joy-jones
    Julia-kuo
    Julie-matysik
    Jump-back-paul
    Jumpy-jack-googily
    June-hunter
    Kara-reynolds
    Kar-Ben Publishing
    Karen-kane
    Karen-nagel
    Kate-testerman
    Katherine-applegate
    Kathleen-kellett
    Kathleen-rushall
    Kathryn-erskine
    Katrin-dreiling
    Kell-andrews
    Kelly Dyksterhouse's Crew
    Kellye-crocker
    Kidlit411
    Kidlit-agent
    Kidlit-agent
    Kidlit-art-director
    Kidlit-art-director
    Kidlit Artist
    Kidlit Author
    Kidlit-author-illustrator
    Kidlit-author-illustrator
    Kidlit-book-designer
    Kidlit-coauthors
    Kidlit-cville-blog-party
    Kidlit-editors
    Kidlit-editors
    Kidlit-events
    Kidlit-events
    Kidlit Love
    Kidlit Reviews
    Kid-reviewer
    Kids-can-press
    Killer-whales
    Kristenpaige-madonia
    Kwame-alexander
    Kweli-the-color-of-childrens-literature-conference
    Ladybug-magazine
    Laura-lyn-disiena
    Law-and-authors-a-legal-handbook-for-writers
    Leah-henderson
    Leaving-room-for-the-illustrator
    Lee-low-books
    Lerner
    Leslie-stall-widener
    Less-is-more
    Levine-querido
    Librarians Favorite
    Lilliput
    Lilys-new-home
    Linda-pratt
    Lindsey McDivitt
    Lion Of The SKy
    Lions-cheetahs-rhinos-oh-my
    Lisa-bronson-mezoff
    Literary-agent-interviews
    Literary-agent-interviews
    Little
    Little-brown-books-for-young-readers
    Little-brown-books-for-young-readers
    Liza-wiemer
    Lois-sepahban
    Lois-sepahban
    London
    Lynne-chapman
    Madeline
    Madelyn-rosenberg
    Making-it-not-too-personal-query-etiquette
    Mama's Chicken And Dumplings
    Mani-semilla-finds-her-quetzal-voice
    Marc-boston
    Marfe-delano
    Margaret-ferguson
    Margaret Ferguson Books
    Maria-gianferrari
    Marvelous-cornelius
    Marvelous-cornelius-blog-party
    Mary-amato
    Mary-jane-penny-candies
    Maryland-kidlit-events
    Mary-rand-hess
    Matt-forest-esenwine
    Maverick-childrens-books
    Megan-wagner-lloyd
    Meg-medina
    Meg-medinas-oneminute-writing-tips
    Melissa-gorzelanczyk
    Melissa-manlove
    Michael F. Stewart
    Michael-j-rosen
    Michelle-meadows
    Middle Grade
    Middlegrade
    Moira-donohue
    Moira-donohue
    Monica-mancillas
    My-work
    Nancy-carpenter
    Nancy-paulsen-books
    Nedda-lewers
    Nfpost
    Nikki-grimes
    Noaa-scientist
    Notable Mentions
    Olga-m-herrera
    Olivia-hinebaugh
    One-day-in-the-eucalyptus
    One-good-deed
    Only-my-dog-knows-i-pick-my-nose
    Orcas-by-dionna-l-mann
    Orchard-books
    Pam-ehrenberg
    Paper-wishes
    Paper-wishes
    Paper-wishes-blog-party
    Paper-wishes-blog-party
    Paula-yoo
    Peachtree-publishers
    Penguin-workshop
    Personal-rejections
    Phil-bildner
    Picture-book-about-change-and-grief
    Picture-book-biography
    Picture-books
    Pj-books
    Planting-parsley
    Poet-remarkable-story-of-george-moses-horton
    Pottypartybydionnalmann
    Pov
    Preorder Campaign
    Prestel-junior
    Proofreading
    Queries
    Query-kombat
    Query-kombat-2018-grand-champion
    Race-car-dreams-blog-party
    Random-housedelacorte
    Rashin-kheiriyeh
    Raven-quill-literary-agency
    Rejections
    Renee-graef
    Return-to-the-secret-garden
    Ritu-hemnani
    Roberta-pressel
    Rosie-mccormick
    Running-press
    Ryan-hayes
    Saffron-ice-cream
    Sairom-moon
    Sam-gayton
    Sam-hundley
    Sampsons-happy-pals
    Sarah-jane-freymann-literary-agency
    Sara-holmes
    Sarah-whang
    Sase
    Scholastic-press
    School-visits
    School-visits
    Scott-dubar
    Scrap-artist
    Sd-schindler
    Sensory-issues
    Seth-fishman
    Setting
    Sharon-chriscoe
    Shirley-ngbenitez
    Short-pump-bump
    Simon-schuster
    Simon-schuster
    Sing-it-like-celia
    Sleeping-bear-press
    Slush-piles
    Solo
    Sonia-sanchez
    Sophia Green
    Sourcebooks
    Sparknotes
    Spencer-hill-contemporary
    Spooky-cheetah-press
    Stan-fellows
    Stephanie-fitzgerald
    Susan-bartoletti
    Susan-batori
    Susan-vanhecke
    Susan-wood
    Suzie-townsend
    Swenke-elementary-book-trailer-crew
    Sylvia-liu
    Tag-your-dreams
    Tami-traylor
    Teresa-bonnadio
    Terrible-typhoid-mary
    Terri-fields
    The 24/7s
    The-amazing-age-of-john-roy-lynch
    The-boney-hand
    The-crossover-review
    The-great-stink
    The Green Piano: How Little Me Found Music
    The-innovative-press
    The-most-magnificent-thing
    Therese-makes-a-tapestry
    The-tale-of-rescue
    The-unbeatable-lily-hong
    The-wild-garden
    The-word-a-storytelling-sanctuary
    THINGS THAT SHIMMER
    This-little-piggy-an-owner-manual
    This-little-piggy-has-a-blog-party
    Thread-of-love
    Tillmon-county-fire
    Tips-for-book-events
    Tom-angleberger
    Tom-birdseye
    Towers-falling
    Trombone-shorty
    Tuck And Tina And The Lost Fortune
    Uwe-stender
    Va
    Vinegar-hill
    Virginia-festival-of-the-book
    Virginia-kidlit-events
    Virginia-kidlit-events
    Virginia-literary-events
    Virginia Readers' Choice Primary Selections 2024-2025
    Walking Tour
    Want-to-play
    Wendy-shang
    Wordsong
    Work-for-hire
    Writing Advice
    Writing-process
    Writing Quotes
    Yaroslava-apollonova
    Zara González Hoang
    Zoe In Wonderland