#KIDLIT CLUBHOUSE: Will Write for Cookies Plus Giveaway

WILL WRITE FOR COOKIES

FOR WRITERS, ILLUSTRATORS, PARENTS, TEACHERS, LIBRARIANS,
AND BOOK LOVERS EVERYWHERE

TODAY’S GUESTS

WOW! What a powerhouse group from #teamKidLitClubhouse! I’m in awe of their combined experiences and expertise – and I’m thrilled to have the chance to introduce them and their 2024 books! 2024 is definitely going to be a fabulous year for children’s literature! I know you are excited to find out more about our guests – and please stick around through the entire post because there is a GIVEAWAY – a chance to have your manuscript critiqued by TWO of these fabulous authors…and you’ll need to leave a comment at the end.

Here’s a little bit about each of them before we get to the questions:
Brentom Jackson is a psychotherapist that writes about the universal lessons within Black American culture. His work not only reflects his extensive background in theatre and performance poetry but also his hope for a future where every child can see themselves in the pages of a book. Brentom lives in Texas with his wife and son. Together they enjoy park walking, people watching, piano playing, and traveling to visit the interesting places they read about in books.
https://www.instagram.com/brentomjackson/
https://www.facebook.com/brentomjackson
https://twitter.com/BrentomJackson

Kelly Zhang is a Canadian children’s writer and Chinese/English literary translator. She writes heartfelt stories drawn from her heritage culture & lived experiences, hoping to inspire readers to stay curious about the world and to connect with peoples and places beyond their familiar ones. Kelly’s PB debut TAKE ME TO LAOLAO, a Chinese mythology-inspired lyrical tale, is forthcoming in Jan 2024 with Quill Tree/HC. Kelly is a member of the SCBWI, a freelance translator for The New York Times for Kids, and a contributor to the WorldKidLit Blog. In her spare time, she makes spicy foods and tries to keep both her child and dog out of trouble.
https://www.instagram.com/kellyzhang_yl
https://twitter.com/KellyZhang_YL

Maria Marianayagam is a Tamil Sri Lankan-Canadian children’s book author. She was born in India and grew up in Nigeria and four provinces across Canada. Maria is a former chemical engineer who fell in love with children’s books (again!) after becoming an Amma (mom). Maria enjoys writing lyrical picture books centered on STEM, faith, and South Asian culture, as well as high concept middle-grade grounded in culture. The first two installments of her debut board book series, BABY HOPE and BABY COURAGE (WorthyKids/Hachette), and her debut picture book THE AMAZING POWER OF GIRLS (Sourcebooks eXplore) release in 2024. When Maria is not writing, she can be found traveling the world, devouring books, and spending time with her wonderful family. She resides in Alberta, Canada, with her husband and two daughters.
https://www.instagram.com/msmarianayagam/

www.facebook.com/maria.s.marianayagam
https://twitter.com/MSMarianayagam

Dazzle Ng is a marketer by trade, a writer by passion, a mother by heart. After graduating with honors from Ateneo de Manila University, she worked for global brands like Unilever and Havaianas. In the media industry, she was the associate publisher/deputy editor of a local magazine; and later on, held regional content and PR positions at theAsianparent, the largest parenting community in Southeast Asia.

As an author,  Dazzle is represented by Lisa Amstutz of Storm Literary. Her upcoming picture books are: When an Elephant Hears NO (PSK, 2024) and When a Rhino Has to Wait (PSK, 2025). An active member of the writing community, she is part of terrific networks such as 12X12 and SCBWI, along with a number of critique and support groups.

https://www.instagram.com/dazzleng.books/
https://www.facebook.com/dazzle.ng.3/
https://twitter.com/dazzleng

More WOWs from me! And yippee…Dazzle is a Storm Literary Agency sister of mine!
We are all ready to learn more about these fabulous guests, so here goes!
ME: Who were your favorite authors/illustrators when you were a child?

KZ: ZHENG Yuanjie (MG author), ZHANG Leping (comic artist)
DN: Shel Silverstein, Roald Dahl
BJ: Ashley Bryan and John Steptoe
MM: Hergé and Robert Munsch

ME: What do you know now that you wish you knew when you first started writing?

KZ: Every step on the journey to publication takes time: writing and revising a manuscript, querying, getting an agent, revising again, going on sub, signing a contract, doing more revisions… It will be a long time before you see your book out in the world. So you have to learn to be patient, and find ways to cope with your anxiety and imposter syndrome in the process. Definitely not easy!

DN: Not to query too early! I wish I’d had the courage to seek out critique partners and join things like pitch contests and writing communities before I deemed my work submission-ready.

BJ: Advice given to me by Kevin Johnson, author of “Cape,” “Focus on the two C’s craft and community, and the rest will come.” Make becoming a better writer and a positive literary citizen your driving value. This is something you can continue to work on with the help of or in spite of the subjective world of publishing .

MM: I was so focused on writing an interesting story at the beginning that I didn’t think too much about the importance of craft–word choice, rhythm, rhetorical devices, etc. and how those could be used to elevate a manuscript to the next level. I wish I worked on my craft sooner.

ME: Where do you like to write – inside, outside, special room, laptop, pen and paper?

KZ: It really depends on the project. Most of the time, I use a note app on my phone to collect ideas during moments of inspiration, then flesh them out on my computer. But some projects require pen and paper–such as m aking a dummy for a picture book idea to sort out the pacing and page turns.

DN: Wherever it’s quiet (my thoughts are noisy enough)!

BJ: I like to write in my office on a laptop. However, I enjoy revising in hotel rooms. I wait until I have at least two or three manuscripts to work on and book a room (with loyalty points) in a neighboring city. The change of scenery and surroundings help me think differently about the stories.

MM: Laptop at my dining table in the middle of the chaos of my kids playing and laughing! There’s just something about it.

ME: When do you write – early morning, late in the day, middle of the night, on schedule, as the muse strikes?

KZ: I used to be a night owl and wrote mostly at night. After becoming a parent, I felt too exhausted to write at the end of the day, so now I write early in the morning before the family is up.

DN: I like to write in the morning, but “when the muse strikes” has produced my best drafts.

BJ: I do stream-of-consciousness writing exercises Monday through Friday at 5:30 am and 9:30 pm for consistency. But the muse usually delivers the creative stuff randomly between 12 and 2 pm.


MM: I write when I have someone around to watch my kids! 🙂

ME: Why do you write for children?

KZ: Children are so curious, perceptive, and open-minded. They deserve to know the diversity of cultures and experiences in the world in which they live, and they deserve to see their beautiful and unique selves reflected in the books they read.


DN: They are the best people on this planet. Their curiosity knows no bounds and their hearts have room to love any story, culture, idea, character—even creature!—they encounter.


BJ: Books and libraries changed the trajectory of my life as a child. I write to pay back that debt.


MM: Children are simply the best–they view the world with open hearts and minds. They approach things with awe and excitement, which is so amazing to be around. And they’re sponges, absorbing information about life, culture, facts, science, anything–they’re the perfect audience to share stories with!

    ME: Also, if you have any thoughts or advice for aspiring writers, please share. As well as anything else you want to talk about that parents, educators, writers, librarians might want to hear.

    KZ: Write from your heart; speak your truth. Do not doubt the value of your story and your unique voice. It will find the reader it needs to reach.

    DN: For aspiring kid lit writers: Don’t take the subjectivity of this industry personally. The right
    manuscript has to land on the right editor’s/agent’s desk (a.k.a. inbox) at the right time. And that time will come, as long as you keep nurturing both your passion and skills.


    BJ: Children spend most of their time learning and playing. As a writer for children you must create opportunities in your life to do the same.

    MM: For aspiring kid lit writers: Read tons of picture books (and beyond). Analyze them. Note the use of structure and word choice. Experiment with your own writing. Reading analytically will develop you as a writer far more than anything else.
    One of my favorite quotes: “You can only write as well as you read.” ― Max Hawthorne

    WE ARE SO VERY GRATEFUL FOR YOUR AUTHENTC AND HEARTFELT RESPONSES.
    Truly, I know that many heads were nodding as you all answered the questions…and you’ve definitely inspired us to believe in ourselves and in the path we’ve chosen as writers for children.

    And our fabulous guests are also sharing a very special recipe!
    “When I was a lonely, scared and scarred eight year old, Mrs. Bertha Flowers, a lean, Black teacher invited me to her house and made tea cakes.” Maya Angelou, I Know Why The Caged Bird Sings
    In honor of Maya Angelou, here is a fabulous recipe for TEXAS TEA CAKE COOKIES

    Texas Tea Cake Cookies
    Ingredients:
    1 cup unsalted butter, softened
    1 cup granulated sugar
    1 egg
    1 teaspoon vanilla extract
    2 cups all-purpose flour
    1/2 teaspoon baking powder
    1/4 teaspoon salt
    1/2 cup finely chopped pecans
    Optional: Powdered sugar for dusting
    Instructions:
    Preheat your oven to 350°F. Line a baking sheet with parchment paper.
    In a mixing bowl, stir together the softened butter and granulated sugar until light and fluffy.
    Add the egg and vanilla extract to the creamed mixture, beating until well combined.
    In a separate bowl, whisk together the flour, baking powder, and salt.
    Gradually add the dry ingredients to the wet ingredients, mixing until a dough forms. Fold pecans into the dough at this stage.
    Roll the dough into small balls (about 1 inch in diameter) and place them on the prepared baking sheet, leaving space between each cookie.
    Flatten each ball slightly with the bottom of a glass or the palm of your hand to create a disc shape.
    Bake in the preheated oven for 10-12 minutes or until the edges of the cookies are lightly golden.
    Remove the cookies from the oven and let them cool on the baking sheet for a few minutes before transferring them to a wire rack to cool completely.
    Once cooled, you can dust the cookies with powdered sugar if desired.
    These tea cake cookies are wonderfully buttery and perfect for pairing with a cup of tea or coffee. Feel free to customize them by adding citrus zest, cinnamon, or other flavorings.

    AND THERE IS MORE, DEAR FRIENDS…A GIVEAWAY!

    GIVEAWAY
    1 winner, 2 critiques! 2 of the KidLit Clubhouse members in this post will critique the winner’s PB manuscript (fiction, <1000 words)

    What a generous giveaway! And dear readers, when you are finished clapping and the applause dies down, please think about how you can support these books. We can:
    Buy them
    Review them
    Put them on your Goodreads WANT TO READ shelf
    Tell friends about them (that’s an easy one…just share the post on your social media)
    Ask your local library to purchase copies for their collection

    I hope you all have a beautiful weekend. I’m continuing to reach out to agents and editors and authors and illustrators as I collect prizes for #50PreciousWords. So far, the response has been amazingly positive!!

    Perfect Picture Book Friday: BENI’S TINY TALES

    Happy Perfect Picture Book Friday, dear friends. And hold onto your hats – because today’s featured book is like a dozen books in one! That’s right! It’s a treasury of stories, recipes, crafts, and more – for Jewish holidays throughout the year. And the art by author/illustrator Jane Breskin Zalben is absolutely delightful!

    BENI’S TINY TALES: Around the World in Jewish Holidays

    Written and illustrated by Jane Breskin Zalben

    Published by Christy Ottaviano (August 8, 2023)

    Ages: 4-8

    Themes: Jewish holidays, family activities, diversity

    Synopsis: From Amazon:
    Join Beni and his family as they celebrate a year in Jewish Holidays, including all their favorite craft activities, recipes, songs, and stories for each occasion. The perfect gift book that gives all year long.

    Chronicling a full year of Jewish festivities—from Rosh Hashanah through Shavuot, with every momentous occasion in between—this one-of-a-kind treasury includes homespun family stories, origin notes, craft activities, songs, and recipes for each holiday.  With ideas on how to make masks for Purim, recipes to bake fresh honey-dipped challah to mark the new year, and so much more, this interactive holiday collection begs to be revisited again and again.
     
    Beautifully crafted and with the right balance of factual details interspersed with fictional stories, this Jewish treasury is a welcome introduction to each holiday in the calendar year, and it is all told through the lens of Beni’s bear family. For parents who grew up reading Beni’s Family Treasury and Beni’s Family Cookbook, the family tradition lives on in this much anticipated compendium for contemporary readers.

    “Mouthwatering recipes, activities, and songs round out the chapters…. Young readers and their grown-ups will find much to savor here.” —Kirkus Reviews

    The Passover Seder table

    Why I Love This Book:
    1. I love that this book has so many different layers – the stories of Beni’s bear family, the many different Jewish holidays and the how and why they are celebrated, fun craft activities and great recipes that everyone can enjoy!
    2. I love the glorious art – the illustrations throughout the book are delightful and captivating – even the end papers engage the reader!
    3. The publisher did not stint when it came to this book – the heavy glossy pages will survive many readings and the handling of young children – and the print is large enough for even my old eyes to see it – this s a quality book from cover to cover!

    The book has received praise and write-ups from many, including:
    ALA: https://journals.ala.org/index.php/cal/article/view/8109/11274
    Betsy Bird: https://afuse8production.slj.com/2023/07/06/celebrating-jewish-holidays-all-year-round-an-interview-with-jane-zalben-about-benis-tiny-tales/

    Usually, I share a craft activity with every Perfect Picture Book Friday post, but because this books is chockful of crafts and recipes – and because author/illustrator Jane Zalben is so generous, we have crafts AND recipes!!!

    How about a recipe for Hamantaschen? When I lived in NYC, one of my favorite pastries was prune hamantaschen. YUM!!!

    When the kids are home from school over the holidays, we often scramble for things to do with them. But with BENI’S TINY TALES, you’ll be scrambling no more!

    When my first child was born, we moved from NYC to a small town in Connecticut. I’ve mentioned before how the backyard had 100 blueberry bushes…and the front yard had three huge old maple trees that we tapped for sap to make maple syrup several times while our children were growing up. It was a great experience…and Jane documents a similar time for Beni and his bear family.

    The bear family on their way to tap the trees


    And here is the recipe for making maple syrup!

    To be honest, I have to admit that I don’t buy every book that I review…there are just too many of them…and my bookcases are already bursting at the seams – but when I saw the wealth of information and the quality of the illustrations, I couldn’t help myself – I hope you will all feel the same way because beautiful books like BENI’S TINY TALES need our help.
    What can we do?
    We can:
    Buy a copy for ourselves or a friend
    Review the book
    Place the title on your Goodreads WANT TO READ shelf
    Tell friends about the book (on social media, please!)
    Ask our local library to purchase copies for their collection

    I’ve bought the book, placed it on my Goodreads shelf, and reviewed it on Amazon.
    And I’ll be sharing on Facebook and Twitter.
    I hope you will find at least one way to help spread the word about this glorious book.

    And I hope you all have a beautiful weekend! I’ve started reaching out to gather prizes for #50PreciousWords…yes, can you believe it…March will be here before you know it. And, dear blog followers, you are the first to know that we already have all of our judges from last year back again. My grateful thanks to Maria Marshall, Pamela Courtney, Carmen Castillo Gilbert, Shirin Shamsi, Leah Moser, Amber Bouchard, and Diane Tulloch for agreeing to this huge task of reading all of the stories (last year there were 756), and meeting multiple times to decide on the 50+ prize winners and 200+ Honorable Mentions. I’ve also heard from the first of the prize donors…we ALREADY have SEVERAL EDITORS AND AGENTS who will give feedback and/or submission opportunities.

    Are you getting excited? AWESOME!!! But before you forget, please share this post on your social media and buy a copy of BENI’S TINY TALES!

    Dress up for PURIM in Beni”s Tiny Tales


    Cover Reveal: ERNO RUBIK AND HIS MAGIC CUBE

    New picture books, like new works of art, add so much to the world: a chance to engage, educate, and inspire children – a chance to spark their creativity and curiosity…ESPECIALLY nonfiction biographies like this one!

    And so, when I get a chance to reveal the cover of an upcoming picture book…ESPECIALLY one that I saw in it’s early stages, I’m totally thrilled!

    WOW! Kids will rush to read this book! The cover is so engaging…and the Rubik’s Cube is still fascinating children and adults alike…even after 50 years!

    Here’s a little bit about the book from the Goodreads page:
    This first picture book biography of Erno Rubik, creator of the Rubik’s Cube, reveals the obsession, imagination, and engineering process behind the creation of a bestselling puzzle that will celebrate its 50th anniversary in 2024.

    In 2023, the world record for solving the Rubik’s Cube was broken by Max Park, who finished in 3.13 seconds!

    And then there’s you. Did you ever get so frustrated with a Rubik’s Cube that you wanted to pull it apart and put it back together in order? Were you to do so, you’d see how cleverly one of the world’s most popular toys is assembled. Working together, the 26 pieces combine to make 43 quintillion possible configurations—but only one solution.

    A solitary child, Erno Rubik grew up in post-World War II Hungary obsessed with puzzles, art, nature, and the underlying patterns and structures. He became a professor of art, architecture, and design, who was still fascinated with how objects work together, sometimes becoming greater than their components. In a quest to help his students understand three-dimensional objects and how they move—not to mention a desire to entertain himself—he fashioned a cube whose pieces twisted and turned without breaking, and unexpectedly invented the Rubik’s Cube, the most popular puzzle in history, which will celebrate its 50th anniversary in 2024.

    To pre-order, please go to:

    And to put the book on your Goodreads WANT TO READ shelf, go here.

    I met Kerry back in 2021 when she applied to the #PBChat Mentorship Program and I fell in love with her manuscript (about Erno) and her application (about herself). I chose Kerry as one of my mentees and it was a joy to work with her. She stopped by today to share a little bit about that path to publication.

    KERRY: I couldn’t be happier that Vivian is revealing the cover of my debut picture book, as she played an important role in my path to publication. I am forever grateful that she chose me as her mentee for the 2021 PBChat Mentorship program hosted by children’s author Justin Colón. She has always believed in this manuscript, and the support she has offered me and so many other picture book creators is astounding. Thank you, Vivian!

    ME: You are so very welcome, dear Kerry! What a joy to see your diligent efforts and desire to craft the best story possible rewarded with this beautiful book.

    Here’s a little bit about Kerry:
    Kerry Aradhya is a children’s author who loves puzzling over words and immersing herself in the creative process. When not writing for youngsters, she works as a science editor and performs with a quirky modern dance ensemble in the San Francisco Bay Area, where she lives with her family and their cute but naughty pooch named Sofie. 

    And here’s a little bit about the illustrator:
    Kara Kramer is a mixed media artist, and illustrator who loves to PLORK with all mediums. She has taught creative art workshops for both children and adults. Ever since she was little, her happiest hours are spent moving her hands to make something new. She lives in Brooklyn, New York, with her family.

    Thank you, dear friends, for spending your precious time with us. I’m already in the planning stages for #50PreciousWords 2024 – and will be reaching out to my assistant judges shortly – and to prize donors, too. The contest will run for only TWO DAYS…March 2 and March 3…so please sharpen your pencils and get busy!