Will Write and Illustrate for Cookies: KIDLIT CLUBHOUSE Plus Multiple Giveaways

Hold onto your hats, dear friends. And grab a cup of your favorite beverage. You are in for a treat! And stick around for the entire post because the fabulous folks from Kidlit Clubhouse are each sharing a favorite yummy recipe AND giveaways!

ME: WELCOME!!! It’s lovely to see all of you fabulous creators! I already know many of you from #50PreciousWords and/or social media. Thank you all for stopping by to share your insights, writing journeys, and upcoming books…plus of course, we are thrilled some of you have offered recipes for sweet treats AND giveaway opportunities. We’ll take turns with the Q&A – and at the end of the post, I’ll list the four giveaways so that when people leave a comment, they’ll let us know which prize they’d prefer if they are one of the lucky winners.
First, here’s a little bit about our guests:

Kerisa Greene is the author-illustrator of I AM BOTH: A VIETNAMESE REFUGEE STORY (Feiwel & Friends, 2024) and LEGENDARY CAKES (Feiwel & Friends, 2025). She has also illustrated for publications such as Ladybug Magazine (Cricket Media, 2023) and THE IMPOSTER (Gnome Road, 2024). 
Kerisa is a first-generation Asian-American who loves her grandma’s cooking and always craves a big bowl of phở. As a previous preschool teacher and children’s book buyer for an indie bookstore with a background in graphic design, Kerisa has combined her love of illustrating and storytelling into a passion for crafting picture books. When Kerisa isn’t drawing or writing stories, you can find her munching on chocolate chip cookies, exploring new places with her family, and petting every dog that walks by.
Website: kerisagreene.com
Email: hello@kerisagreene.com
Twitter: https://twitter.com/kerisagreene
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/kerisagreenebooks/
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/kerisagreenebooks
Sales Order Links:
East City Bookshop
Barnes and Noble
Amazon
Bookshop.org
Target

Chloe Ito Ward
A former curriculum director, Chloe has a Master of Education in Curriculum and Instruction. She spent the last decade teaching kindergarten, where she discovered her passion for picture books.
Chloe’s debut picture book LOVE GROWS HERE releases April 2024 with Albert Whitman & Company. Her other picture books include: MADE FOR MORE, arriving WINTER 2025 with HarperCollins and CHOPSTICKS ARE, coming SPRING 2026 with Chronicle Books.
When Chloe isn’t perfecting her ramen recipe, you can find her rock climbing or dancing in the kitchen with her husband, son, and their imaginary dog Miso.
Pre-Order LOVE GROWS HERE at
https://bookshop.org/p/books/love-grows-here-chloe-ito-ward/20303779
http://www.chloeitoward.com
https://www.instagram.com/chloeitoward

Jamie Ofelia is the author of the humorous and heartfelt picture book MIGUEL MUST FIGHT!, which is slated for publication with Little, Brown Books for Young Readers in summer of 2024. As a biracial Latina, Jamie writes fiction and nonfiction stories so Latinx kids can see themselves reflected as heroes in mainstream children’s literature. She holds her master’s degree in marriage and family therapy and is currently a stay-at-home mom living in Dallas, where she spends her days reading diverse picture books with her son. When her son gets bored, she continues reading diverse picture books all by herself.
JamieOfelia.com
https://bookshop.org/p/books/miguel-must-fight-jamie-ofelia/20368176

David McMullin is a picture book writer, illustrator, and children’s poet. His poems are featured in several magazines and anthologies. Honors include an SCBWI Ann Whitford Paul Award, an Astra International Picture Book Writing Contest award, a Madness Poetry championship and he was a Picture Book Rising Stars mentor. David and his husband are currently full time world travelers, bird nerds, and YouTubers. In past careers he was a Broadway actor, an educator, and a children’s librarian.
Website: http://www.davidmcmullinbooks.com/welcome/
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/davidmcmullinpb/
Twitter: https://twitter.com/davidmcmullinpb

Joëlle Retener is a 1st generation Haitian American children’s author from the DC metro area. Once upon a time, they traveled the world hobnobbing with foreign dignitaries and senior government officials. They now work as a reproductive justice advocate and community birth worker. Joelle has a BA in Spanish from Spelman College and an MA in International Studies from American University. When they’re not tending to their homestead, you can find Joelle on their porch sipping a cup of herbal tea with their partner and 3 tiny humans. Joëlle is represented by James McGowan at Bookends Literary.
Social media
Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/joelleretener/
bluesky: @joelleretener.bsky.social
www.joelleretener.comPreferred purchase link:
https://bookshop.org/p/books/marley-s-pride-joelle-retener/20576412

ME: And now it’s time to ask the questions. Who were your favorite authors/illustrators when you were a child?

KERISA: Some of my favorite books as a kid were Chrysanthemum by Kevin Henkes, Stellaluna by Janell Cannon, and Dinotopia by James Gurney.

CHLOE: I loved Don Freeman’s picture book DANDELION. I had such a strong emotional response to it as a kid, it still makes me cry. Also, the limited color palette for that book is lovely! The first book I read and thought, I want to be an author, was ELLA ENCHANTED by Gail Carson Levine. It’s immersive, magical, and empowering. I must have read that book 50+ times the year my mom bought it for me. I still have that book, with dog eared pages and tomato soup stains!

JAMIE: Frances Hodgson Burnett’s books, The Little Princess and The Secret Garden, captured my imagination in a big way when I was a kid.

DAVID: My favorite was Roald Dahl, especially James and the Giant Peach. I also loved The Little Prince by Antoine de Saint-Exupéry. They both created such fantastic worlds.

JOELLE: Growing up I loved reading books by Beverly Cleary, Judy Blume and Stan and Jan Berenstain. 

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

KERISA: Hmm, when I first started I took all the writing courses I could, which was so incredibly
beneficial but I realized I learn and grow the most from actually writing and editing stories. So I guess I wish I wasn’t so afraid to just write and just gave myself the space to learn and grow with each manuscript without the pressure of thinking that everything I wrote needed to turn into something. I wish I knew that it’s okay to just play and try out an idea for fun!

CHLOE: Everyone talks about voice. But finding and creating your voice as a writer takes time and lots of practice. It wasn’t until I started leaning into my love of poetry that I really found my own distinct voice.

JAMIE: I’ve learned that as I’m drafting, it doesn’t help me much to worry about whether what I’m writing will impress others. In order to craft an exciting story, I have to follow my own nose and focus on impressing myself first. I know that if I love the story, that passion will come through stronger in my writing.
Critique partners are essential to my revision process, but only after I’ve finished drafting something I love.

DAVID: How important it is to make connections within the writing community. I can attribute much of my growth and success as a writer to the relationships I built with other writers. So get on those socials and start socializing. I wish I had started making connections earlier.

JOELLE: As a recovering perfectionist I really struggled with the idea of sharing unpolished manuscripts with fellow writers. What would they think? What would they say? It’s taken a while to work through the anxiety but I now recognize that art is really a collaborative process. My critique partners each bring unique perspectives and insights into the mix which ultimately strengthen my work. They help me to stretch and grow as an author. So don’t be afraid to get an extra set of eyes on that SFD (sh*tty first draft). 

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

KERISA: With a young baby, I’ll write wherever I can which usually means I’m typing up ideas and drafts on my phone. I do prefer to edit on the computer though and need a quiet space to sit with all my thoughts!

CHLOE: Since I’m the primary caregiver of a toddler I typically write at either the kitchen counter or table. I need to have one eye on my son and another on my computer. I dream of having a desk one day!

JAMIE:  I write when and where I can! Usually it’s on my laptop at a café or on the couch. Sometimes an idea strikes while I’m in the middle of doing dishes or walking the dog, and I have to quickly tap it into the Notes app on my phone. If I don’t write it down, I WILL forget!

DAVID: I prefer to work curled up on a couch. My medium depends on the style of writing. Prose goes right onto the computer. If I’m writing in rhyme, I work on paper so I can have all of the pieces spread out in front of me.

JOELLE: My writing habits are a bit eclectic. I usually write indoors on my laptop but when I am feeling stuck or experiencing writer’s block, I like to switch things up by writing with pen and paper. I have random notes on receipts and there are pieces of loose leaf paper with my notes and musings scattered across the house. I find that moving between digital and analog helps eliminate the self censorship that naturally occurs with easy access to a delete button. 

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

KERISA: As the muse strikes! Which usually happens late in the evening or when I’m supposed to be working on something else.

CHLOE: I get in little bits of writing throughout the day, during breakfast/lunch/nap or when my son is entertaining himself with building blocks or painting. But I prefer to write when the world is quiet, so either early in the morning or after everyone goes to bed. I drink a LOT of coffee and tea!

JAMIE:  I’m a morning person; My brain is fresh and eager to work early in the day. Lately, I’ve been writing for about 30 minutes before my family wakes up, and then again for maybe another hour while my kiddo is in morning preschool.

DAVID: I am highly distractible. I work best in the wee hours of the morning before the rest of the world wakes up.

JOELLE: I typically do my best writing in the morning- ideally at the crack of dawn (I’m talking 4-5am). There’s something about writing when the world is still wrapped in stillness that really gets my creative juices flowing. With that said, I don’t schedule my writing. I really like to honor my creative rhythms instead.

ME: Why do you write for children?

KERISA: There’s so much joy and wonder in the way children see the world and it’s that awe that I want to imbue into the books I create. Writing for children is such a gift, kids can empathize with an emotional book while also laugh themselves silly at a fart joke and it’s amazing!

CHLOE: I taught kindergarten for over ten years and there is something so special about being a part of a child’s life. I find that picture books are a great tool to help kids grow mentally and emotion ally. Growing up I didn’t have stories with characters like me so I hope to bring that, I want kids to feel heard, seen, and accepted.

JAMIE: I write for children because they’re the most important people on this planet! Kids deserve riveting, joyful books that reflect their experiences and their families, and they also deserve the opportunity to read about families whose culture is different from their own!

DAVID:  I was one of those kids who only read when I had no other choice. It wasn’t until I was an adult that I discovered what a joy reading could be. I write because I would love to create the kind of books that reluctant readers, like I was, reach for and can’t put down.

JOELLE: Writing for children is an opportunity to affect change and make an impact on future generations. It’s a chance to dream up a world that is better than what we’ve got and empower children to strive to make it a reality.
Writing for children also allows me to step outside of my adult roles and responsibilities and jaded perspectives and connect to my inner child– we can all use a little more fun and joy in our lives.

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.

CHLOE: There were so many times on my publishing journey that I thought, this is impossible, I’m not good enough, what am I doing? But I have so many wonderful friends that encouraged me to keep going, reminding me that contrary to the nagging voice inside my head, I am talented. We can be so self-critical. So please, talk to yourself the way you would a friend, be gentle with yourself, and find your people, the kidlit community is the best!

DAVID: Feel “Free to Be Fabulous!” at all times! That’s not just the title of my book, it’s a great way to approach the world. Parents, teachers and librarians, help kids make reading choices that are different, adventurous and fun. Kids can learn, be, do anything in the pages of a book. And writers, create those fabulous stories. Be brave and daring. Say what your heart wants you to say.

JOELLE: This is a message for all of those who write, consume and share diverse books. Don’t give up on these stories. I know the fight is exhausting and that you may be scared but keep going. Our kids need these books and they need us to keep pushing to keep them accessible for all. Let’s continue to work together to ensure that children can see themselves affirmed through the media around them. The future of future generations is in our hands. 

What an amazing high note to end on! Thank you so much, dear guests! And of course, the sweetness isn’t over yet! Here are some of their favorites treat recipes:

KERISA’S Coconut Chocolate Chip Cookies
Ingredients
1/2 cup butter, softened
3/4 cup sugar
1 large egg, room temperature
1-1/3 cups all-purpose flour
1/2 teaspoon baking soda
1/2 teaspoon salt
1 cup dark chocolate chips
1/2 cup sweetened shredded coconut
Directions
Grab a large bowl, cream the butter and sugar then beat in the egg. Combine the flour, baking soda, and salt; add to the creamed mixture. Stir in the chocolate chips and coconut.
Scoop out the dough into small balls onto a baking sheet. Bake at 375° for about 12 minutes or until golden brown. 
Let them cool and enjoy this delicious writing snack! 

CHLOE’S SUPER SECRET Chocolate Chip Cookie Recipe
Preheat the oven to 350
Mix wet ingredients first
2 eggs
1 cup Crisco oil
1 cup brown sugar
1 cup white sugar
2 teaspoons vanilla
Then blend in
2 cups of flour
1 teaspoon baking soda
½ teaspoon salt
1 cup oatmeal
6 oz chocolate chips
Bake for approximately 7-12 minutes depending on cookie size and enjoy!

DAVID’S Dream Cookies
Ingredients
1 cup butter
3/4 cup sugar
2 tablespoons vanilla
1 teaspoon baking powder
2 cups flour
Preparation
Melt butter until golden
Cool
Mix all ingredients
Make little balls and press down with two fingers
Bake at 250 for 30 minutes

Yummy!!! Summertime and the kids are home and baking delicious cookies is such a fun activity.

And here are the giveaways:
Kerisa: PB Critique (Manuscript or Dummy)
Jamie: Picture book critique
David: A fiction picture book critique, or a 30 minute ask me anything zoom call.
Joelle: PB manuscript critique (fiction, non rhyming)

How special is that, dear friends!!! Please make sure you comment below and tell us which prize you would prefer if you are one of the lucky winners – and perhaps 2nd choice. Also, please share this post widely…that’s how we can thank authors and illustrators for all the hard work they do. Of course, buying a copy of their books, reviewing them, and asking your local library to purchase copies are all fabulous things we can do, as well as placing them on our Goodreads Want to Read Shelf.
By the way, I hope you’ll all be back tomorrow, bright and early…we’ll be posting the results of the #50PreciousWords content….tick…tick…tick.

Perfect Picture Book Friday: DANCING THROUGH SPACE: Dr. Mae Jemison Soars to New Heights PLUS Giveaway

Happy Perfect Picture Book Friday, dear friends. I love when past guests return to Picture Books Help Kids Soar because it usually means they have a brand-new book that just launched…and that’s exactly why the lovely Lydia Lukidis is here today! Hurray! And get ready for a treat because Lydia stopped by to share the story behind the story…AND offer a giveaway. So, stick around and make sure you leave a comment!

DANCING THROUGH SPACE: Dr. Mae Jemison Soars to New Heights

Written by Lydia Lukidis

Illustrated by Sawyer Cloud

Published by Albert Whitman (April 4, 2024)

Ages:4-8

Themes: Women in Science, STEM, diversity

Synopsis: From the Amazon Sales Page:
“A quick but lyrical character study.”—Kirkus Reviews
“The sky proves no limit in Lukidis’s encouraging biography of Black female astronaut Mae Jemison.”—Publishers Weekly

The true story of Dr. Mae Jemison, whose lifelong passions of science and dance prepared her to become a trailblazing astronaut.



Today, Dr. Mae Jemison is famous for being the first Black woman to travel into outer space. But when she was growing up, she felt torn between two passions: science and dance. It seemed like an impossible choice. There had to be some way to make room for both—and Mae found one. As an adult, she combined her gifts of scientific logic and artistic creativity and became an astronaut.

Why I Love This Book:
1. I love finding out about Women in Science and stories I hadn’t heard before!
2. I love the lyrical writing and engaging narrative!
3. I love the vivid art that puts us right up there in space with Mae – and that helps the reader connect with the story.

RELATED ACTIVITIES:
Shiny Galaxy Slime

Photo courtesy: https://www.simpleeverydaymom.com/space-crafts-for-kids/

For detailed instructions and more space crafts: https://www.simpleeverydaymom.com/space-crafts-for-kids/

Are you still with us? Haven’t blasted off into outer space? Good, I’m glad…because author Lydia just landed and she wants to share a bit about the story behind the story.
ME: Welcome, Lydia! Thanks so much for stopping by.

LYDiA:
Thank you, Vivian! I’m so excited to announce the release of my latest nonfiction picture book Dancing through Space: Dr. Mae Jemison Soars to New Heights illustrated by Sawyer Cloud and published by Albert Whitman.

I wrote this book as a dual narrative that features both of Mae’s passions. As the story unfolds, the two worlds merge, illuminating how art and science are both essential parts of our world.

But I confess, the road to publication was bumpier than usual and fraught with challenges!

Challenge #1: I wrote the first versions in 2013 and started pitched it at various pitch festivals online. One agent was interested but when I showed her my other books, she passed. Looking back, I was a newbie and had a lot to learn.

Challenge #2: I did a million more pitch festivals (and if you’ve done them, you know how stressful they can be). I got hearts but no offers. After querying a slew of agents, I finally signed with my first agent, yay! We went out on sub with this ms but got rejection after rejection, boo.

Challenge #3: I remember one of the critiques calling my writing “regular.” Looking back, those first versions were pretty terrible. I finally realized the problem: the focus was too wide and there was no hook. After several years of research, I finally found the hook; the intersection of dance and science. Editors responded well to it but still, no offers.

Challenge #4: I dove deeper into the hook and the book improved, but I parted ways with that agent. Boo… I bounced back pretty quickly and started a mad querying rush. I signed with a great agent, but she didn’t vibe with this story, so it was shelved.

Challenge #5: Uh oh, after a year, I parted ways with my second agent. I started to reassess my career at that point and fell into an existential slump. No querying or writing for a while.

Challenge #6: I decided to try to pitch the ms again and one editor was really gung-ho about it, it was Nivair H. Gabriel (from Barefoot Books at the time) so I sent her the ms. She loved it and wanted to acquire it, but asked for some revisions and I got to work. But when I tried to send it to Nivair, I found out she had just left Barefoot Books! I sent the revisions to the new editor but she didn’t share Nivair’s excitement and passed.

Challenge #7: In 2020, I signed with my dream agent Miranda Paul. I showed her the revised ms. She loved it, but worried I had already subbed earlier versions too widely and it would be a hard sell. She told me to be patient.

Then, yay, we got an offer from Albert Whitman! After a 10-year journey and 42 revisions, the book is done and released!

I’m grateful.

ME: And we are grateful, too. For this book, dear Lydia…and for you never giving up. Persistence…where have I heard that before? Oh yes…it’s one of my 5 Ps. Thank you so much for sharing your path to publication…an ELEVEN YEAR journey for this beautiful book!!!

Here’s a little bit about Lydia:
Lydia Lukidis is the author of 50+ trade and educational books for children. Her titles include DANCING THROUGH SPACE: Dr. Mae Jemison Soars to New Heights (Albert Whitman, 2024), DEEP, DEEP, DOWN: The Secret Underwater Poetry of the Mariana Trench (Capstone, 2023) which was shortlisted for a Silver Birch Express (Forest of Reading) award, THE BROKEN BEES’ NEST(Kane Press, 2019) which was nominated for a Cybils Award, and NO BEARS ALLOWED (Clear Fork Media, 2019). A science enthusiast from a young age, she now incorporates her studies in science and her everlasting curiosity into her books.

Lydia is very involved in the kidlit community. She volunteers as a judge on Rate your Story, co-hosts the annual Fall Writing Frenzy competition, and is an active member of SCBWI, CANSCAIP, 12 x 12, and The Authors Guild. Another passion of hers is fostering a love for children’s literacy through the writing workshops she regularly offers in elementary schools across Quebec with the Culture in the Schools program.
Lydia is represented by Miranda Paul from the Erin Murphy Literary Agency.

To find out more about Lydia and her books and to connect with her:
Web: http://www.lydialukidis.com/
Presale links: https://www.albertwhitman.com/book/dancing-through-space/
Blog: https://lydialukidis.wordpress.com/
Twitter: https://twitter.com/LydiaLukidis
FB: https://www.facebook.com/LydiaLukidis/

We all know how important it is to help new books become successful…and we can all help: We can:
Buy the book
Review the book
Put it on your Goodreads WANT TO READ SHELF
Tell friends about it (Share on social media)
Ask your local library to purchase copies for their collection
Please do at least ONE of these things…if you do more, you get extra tickets in the giveaway hat. And make sure you leave a comment because Lydia is happy to give away a free copy of DANCING THROUGH SPACE (US only).

Thank you for spending your precious time with us.
I hope you all have a beautiful weekend.

Happy Book Birthday: THE MUD ANGELS: How Students Saved the City of Florence

A couple of years ago, author Karen Greenwald showed me the manuscript for THE MUD ANGELS: How Students Saved the City of Florence. I read it and I told her: THIS IS A BOOK!

And now it is!!! HAPPY BOOK BIRTHDAY TO THE MUD ANGELS!!!

The cover is everything we could hope – wonderful color palette…and beautiful art! And I love how the title is sitting in the muck and mud! Olga Lee did a fabulous job!

Here’s a little bit about the book from the Amazon sales page:
Based on real events, this story shows how a team of international volunteers worked together to save priceless artifacts after a flood.

When the Arno River floods the city of Florence, Italy in 1966, it leaves slimy, smelly mud everywhere. A young girl watches students from around the world, many from the US, help save the town’s rare treasures, earning themselves the nickname Gli Angeli del Fango, the Mud Angels.

According to the publisher, the book targets ages 4-8 – but honestly, this is a picture book that also belongs in the upper elementary and middle school classroom! What a fabulous story to encourage young readers to become activists – to get involved with what’s going on around them, in their school and in their community and beyond.
So please, dear friends, spread the word:
Share on your social media
Place it on your GOODREADS WANT TO READ SHELF
Review it on Amazon
Ask your local library to purchase copies for their collection
Buy the book

And now, because author Karen is such a sweetheart, she stopped by to share a bit of the story behind the story – what drew her to write MUD ANGELS.
ME: Welcome, dear Karen…thank you for coming to chat with us!

KAREN: Hi Vivian, it’s lovely to be here. Thank you so much for joining the celebration for THE MUD ANGELS.
When you first begin learning how to write picture books, you start hearing about all the rules. This can feel overwhelming at times. However, there is one that I find myself returning to again and again—the idea that you should write what you feel personally connected to or have experience with. This is advice not to ignore! The Mud Angels touches on many facets of my life, from the environmental aspects to my obvious and enormous love of libraries, from the fact that it was the first-time books were treated as art, to my interest in studying various cultures…and, ultimately, the community of global youth that joined harmoniously to do something important for the world. I have loved researching, interviewing, and learning about this dark (and yet, hopeful) period in history. Along the way, the process has yielded me new friendships, education, and food for thought. It even inspired me to take Italian!

I hope others in kid lit find stories to write that nurture their souls as much as this one does mine!

That’s fabulous advice, Karen. Because when we feel connected with the story we are researching, the writing shows that – and the reader connects, too.

To connect with Karen and find out more about her books: https://www.karengreenwald.com/

And here’s a totally cool trailer for MUD ANGELS from Italy:

Thank you for spending your precious time with us. Please come back tomorrow for Perfect Picture Book Friday when we welcome Lydia Lukidis and her new book, DANCING THROUGH SPACE!