Book Recommendation

Happy Book Birthday, KID COACH!

By Rob Justus

As a debut picture book author and illustrator, I didn’t know that “book birthdays” were a thing (I like to operate in a nice little bubble). We were told that we could write about anything that celebrates this momentous occasion in an author’s life. It’s a big deal! GUYS! I’M PUBLISHED!!!

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I thought about doing a light-hearted post focusing on the evolution of a particular spread in KID COACH that started as this:

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And turned into this:

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But I didn’t think it did my journey to publication justice.

 A lot of people think it’s easy to make a children's book. Getting published is a marathon, not a sprint.

When I found out an offer was being made on KID COACH in September of 2018, I was sitting alone in my small one bedroom apartment, eating McDonalds in the dark.

Ottawa, Canada — where I live — was in the middle of a mass blackout after a strong storm and a series of tornadoes ripped through several parts of the city. Oddly most of my friends and family were out of town. My partner had taken the car for the weekend for a bachelorette party, so I was relegated to hanging out by myself.

My agent called to tell me the good news, then told me to go celebrate with people, but there I was . . . alone in the dark eating a Big Mac.

At first it was funny. Of course no one would be around to share this news with! But as the weekend went on it gave me time to reflect on the five-year journey it took to get a book deal. The second night without power, I had decided to have a beer in the park overlooking the Ottawa River.

It was at this point that I had a good cry.

I was feeling such a mix of emotions. I was over the moon that I had finally accomplished my goal, my dream! I’d been through numerous submissions, rejections, and loads of self-doubt, but also my life had completely changed in those five years.

One of the reasons I took a shot at becoming a children’s book author and illustrator was because I’d been laid off and couldn’t find a job in my field. My industry had shrunk and I was losing job opportunities to people who had 20 years more experience than me as they scrambled for employment. It was shortly after this that my marriage suddenly came to an end. My ex-wife encouraged me to get into children's books, and I’m forever thankful to her for that, but I know it also played a role in the end of our marriage. Soon after this, my dad relapsed after 30 years of sobriety. I’m not sure what was harder. Going through my divorce or seeing my dad fall off the wagon so hard.

I could have given up then. I was broke. I had no real place to call home. It was just me and my dog, but I knew this is what I was supposed to do. The feeling was and is SO strong inside of me!

Thankfully during that time I met the most beautiful and supportive woman. She believes in me, even when my commitment “to make it” waivers. Without her support I wouldn’t have found my agent. Without her support I wouldn’t have written new stories. Without her support KID COACH would not have made it to publication, and it certainly wouldn’t be the fun read-out-loud it is today.

Needless to say, that night by the river all these emotions poured out of me. It had been such a long journey, but without all that I wouldn’t be here. It made the good news and that weekend so much more powerful. It made me appreciate where I was, what I had been through, and where I was going. Those five years taught me perseverance, persistence, and hard work.

Now here I am, a year and a half later. A new dad, engaged to the love of my life and prouder than anything that it’s my first book’s birthday! Not only that, I’m hard at work on the next three books to be released over the next two years (a second picture book with Page Street Kids and a series of middle-grade graphic novels named Death & Sparkles). FOUR books in three years!

It’s funny to think that this next phase of my new career started alone in the dark. Thankfully my future seems so bright.

Thanks, and happy birthday, KID COACH!

(Now go buy five copies of KID COACH!)


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Rob Justus is a guy who does this and that. When he’s not doing things, he’s probably doing stuff. His debut thingy, KID COACH, was born out of his love of doodads. He lives in that place where that guy with the air lives.




Follow Rob:
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Book Details

KID COACH

by Rob Justus

Pub Date: February 4, 2020
ISBN: 978-1-6241-4886-6
Publisher: Page Street Kids

 

Soaring ’20s Top (20 x 2) Books of 2019

It’s the most wonderful time of the year! A season of celebrating. A season of giving. A season of year-end book lists – including this one produced by the Soaring ’20s.

In our lists below, we’re sure you’ll find the perfect kidlit book for every book lover in your life. So grab a hot cocoa, cozy up with your favorite blanket, and read on.

Picture Books (Fiction)

A Stone Sat Still by Brendan Wenzel (Chronicle, 2019) Recommended by Susan Kusel

Chicken Break: A Counting Book by Cate Berry, illus. by Charlie Adler (Feiwel & Friends, 2019) Recommended by Candy Wellins

How Do You Dance? by Thyra Heder (Abrams Books for Young Readers, 2019) Recommended by Shelley Johannes

Hum and Swish by Matt Myers (Neal Porter Books, 2019) Recommended by Hope Lim

Llama Destroys the World by Jonathan Stutzman, illus. by Heather Fox (Henry Holt & Co., 2019) Recommended by Abi Cushman

Lubna and Pebble by Wendy Meddour, illus. by Daniel Egneus (Dial Books, 2019) Recommended by Elisa Boxer

My Papi Has a Motorcycle by Isabel Quintero, illus. by Zeke Peña (Koklia, 2019) Recommended by Angela Burke Kunkel

Pokko and the Drum by Matthew Forsythe (Paula Wiseman Books, 2019) Recommended by Julie Rowan-Zoch, Kjersten Hayes, and Isabella Kung

Saturday by Oge Mora (Little Brown Books for Young Readers, 2019) Recommended by Carrie Finison

Small in the City by Sydney Smith (Neal Porter Books, 2019) Recommended by Shelley Johannes

Small World by Ishta Mercurio, illus. by Jen Corace (Abrams Books for Young Readers, 2019) Recommended by Rob Justus

Twins by Mike Ciccotello (Farrar, Straus & Giroux Books for Young Readers, 2019) Recommended by Abi Cushman

When Grandma Gives You a Lemon Tree by Jamie L.B. Deenihan, illus. by Lorraine Rocha (Sterling Children's Books, 2019) Recommended by Kjersten Hayes 

Picture Books (Informational/Nonfiction)

Birds of a Feather: Bower Birds and Me by Susan L. Roth (Neal Porter Books, 2019) Recommended by Melanie Ellsworth

Dinosaur Feathers by Dennis Nolan (Neal Porter Books, 2019) Recommended by Susan Kusel

Evelyn the Adventurous Entomologist: The True Story of a World-Traveling Bug Hunter by Christine Evans, illus. Yasmin Imamura (Innovation Press, 2019) Recommended by Vicky Fang

Manhattan: Mapping the Story of an Island by Jennifer Thermes (Abrams Books for Young Readers, 2019) Recommended by Lindsay Metcalf

Muslim Girls Rise by the Soaring ’20s own Saira Mir, illus. Aaliya Jaleel (Salaam Reads, 2019)

Paper Son: The Inspiring Story of Tyrus Wong, Immigrant and Artist by Julie Leung, illus. Chris Sasaki (Schwartz & Wade, 2019) Recommended by Isabella Kung

What Miss Mitchell Saw by Hayley Barrett, illus. Diana Sudyka (Beach Lane Books, 2019) Recommended by Rajani LaRocca and Kelly Carey

Chapter Books

Beatrice Zinker Upside Down Thinker: Sabotage (Beatrice Zinker #3) (Disney-Hyperion, 2019) by the Soaring ’20s own Shelley Johannes

Diary of an Ice Princess series (Scholastic Paperbacks, 2019) by the Soaring ’20s own Christina Soontornvat

Frank and Bean by Jamie Michalak, illus. by Bob Kolar (Candlewick, 2019) Recommended by Kelly Carey

Yasmin in Charge (Meet Yasmin series) by Saadia Faruqi, illus. by Hatem Aly (Picture Window Books, 2019) Recommended by Saira Mir

Two Dogs in a Trench Coat Go on a Class Trip (Two Dogs in a Trench Coat #3) by Julie Falatko, illus. by Colin Jack (Scholastic, 2019) Recommended by Angela Burke Kunkel

Middle Grade

All the Impossible Things by Lindsey Lackey (Roaring Brook Press, 2019) Recommended by Darshana Khiani and Vicky Fang

Midsummer’s Mayhem by the Soaring ’20s own Rajani LaRocca

Other Words for Home by Jasmine Warga (Balzer + Bray, 2019) Recommended by Angela Kunkel

Planet Earth is Blue by Nicole Panteleakos (Wendy Lamb Books, 2019) Recommended by Jen Malia

Summer of a Thousand Pies by Margaret Dilloway (Balzer + Bray, 2019) Recommended by Kelly Carey

Sweeping Up The Heart by Kevin Henkes (Greenwillow Books, 2019) Recommended by Kelly Carey

This Was Our Pact by Ryan Andrew (First Second, 2019) Recommended by Rob Justus

Young Adult

Cursed by Karol Ruth Silverstein (Charlesbridge Teen, 2019) Recommended by Colleen Paeff

Elon Musk: A Mission to Save the World (Feiwel & Friends, 2019) by the Soaring ’20s own Anna Crowley Redding 

Patron Saints of Nothing by Randy Ribay (Kokila, 2019) Recommended by Darshana Khiani

The Library of Lost Things by Taylor Namey (Inkyard Press, 2019) Recommended by Joana Pastro

The Truth Is by the Soaring ’20s own NoNieqa Ramos (Carolrhoda Lab, 2019)

They Called Us Enemy by George Takei, Justin Eisinger, and Steven Scott, illus. by Harmony Becker (Top Shelf Productions, 2019) Recommended by Kirsten W. Larson and Darshana Khiani

Voices: The Final Hours of Joan of Arc by David Elliott (HMH Books for Young Readers, 2019) Recommended by Kirsten W. Larson

Opposite of Always by Justin A. Reynolds (Katherine Tegen Books, 2019) Recommended by Rajani LaRocca