Books in the Classroom

Book Birthday: DOZENS OF DOUGHNUTS (and Win a Signed Copy!)

Fresh from the frying pan, DOZENS OF DOUGHNUTS launches today—July 21! Launching a debut picture book is more exciting than having a whole PILE of doughnuts all for myself (although, LouAnn, the main character in the book, might disagree).

Illustration by Brianne Farley

In the story, LouAnn is frying up a doughnut feast as a late-fall, pre-hibernation treat for herself. YUM! But just before she takes her first bite, the bell rings—ding-dong! Her friend Woodrow drops by. LouAnn is happy to share her doughnuts, but as soon as they sit down to eat—ding-dong! Clyde is at the door. One by one, LouAnn’s friends come over until it’s one big party. LouAnn makes batch after batch of doughnuts, always dividing them equally among her friends. (Yes, there’s some math involved.) But LouAnn makes one BIG miscalculation: She forgets to save any for herself!

Here's a quick video I made to share more about the book:

There are many firsts and surprises when launching a picture book. Perhaps one of the most surprising aspects, given the mental image we all have of a writer scribbling away alone in an attic somewhere, is how many people touch the book in some way, both pre- and post-publication. I have DOZENS of people to thank! In semi-chronological order . . .

First, my children, my husband, and my mother for both the inspiration and the time away from day-to-day responsibilities to pursue this dream of writing for children. THANK YOU!

Second, to my critique partners and groups — my International PBWriters, the Poets’ Garage, the Writers’ Loft and my local critique partners, the 12x12 Challenge group, and so many more who helped polish and shape the manuscript over the course of years. THANK YOU!

Third, to my agent, Linda Epstein, who kept asking, “What about that doughnut book? I like that one,” and then shepherded it masterfully through the submissions and acquisitions process. THANK YOU!

Fourth, to my editor, Stephanie Pitts, the art director, book designer, and the whole team at Putnam Books who have lavished their talent and attention on the book in ways that are clearly visible and in many ways that no one ever sees. THANK YOU!

Fifth, to illustrator Brianne Farley, who added the “picture” part to our picture book, and brought LouAnn, her friends, and world to life visually with skill and passion. THANK YOU!

Sixth, to my many writing friends and groups, especially the Soaring ’20s, who have helped launch the book with their good wishes, reviews, library requests, book purchases, and more. THANK YOU!

Seventh, to the book bloggers and podcasters who have invited me to share about the book’s journey on their sites, and to the kind reviewers who are singing the praises of the book much farther and wider than I can myself. THANK YOU!

Eighth, to the librarians and teachers who are purchasing the book to add to their libraries and share with their students (however that looks during the coming school year). THANK YOU!

Ninth, to the booksellers who are open in spirit, if not physically open right now, and who are stocking the book on their shelves and finding ways to help get the word out. THANK YOU!

Tenth, to my extended family and friends near and far who have sent their good wishes, and flooded my local bookstore with preorders that far exceeded my expectations. THANK YOU!

Eleventh, to Belmont Books, who is hosting, and to everyone who will join me for my launch party TONIGHT (see below for details). THANK YOU! 

Twelfth, to the READERS, who are willing to join me in this charming woodland world full of doughnuts and who will (I hope) enjoy reading the book as much as I enjoyed writing it. THANK YOU!

If you’re reading this, then YOU’RE INVITED to my virtual launch party and doughnut celebration which takes place TONIGHT at 6:30 pm Eastern. Please click here to register ASAP to get the link to the event:

I’ll read the book aloud, share some behind-the-scenes secrets, do some doughnut math, and answer your questions. BYOD (Bring Your Own Doughnut)!

And now for a giveaway:

Two months from today, on September 21, I’ll draw a winner from all my newsletter subscribers for a free signed copy of DOZENS OF DOUGHNUTS. Just subscribe to my newsletter and you’ll be entered! Here’s the link to subscribe: https://www.carriefinison.com/newsletter

 

Book Details

DOZENS OF DOUGHNUTS

by Carrie Finison,

Illustrated by Brianne Farley

Pub Date: July 21
ISBN: 978-0-is 5255-1835-8
Publisher: G.P. Putnam's Sons Books for Young Readers

Carrie Finison writes picture books with humor and heart, including DOZENS OF DOUGHNUTS and the forthcoming books DON'T HUG DOUG (2021) and HURRY, LITTLE TORTOISE (2022). She lives in the Boston area with her family. Connect with her online at www.carriefinison.com or on Twitter @CarrieFinison, Facebook at carrie.finison, or Instagram @carriefinison.

HOW TO WEAR A SARI: Interview and Cover Reveal!

By NONIEQA RAMOS

The Soaring ‘20s are thrilled to host the cover reveal of Darshana Khiani’s debut picture book, HOW TO WEAR A SARI! 

Darshana Khiani

Darshana Khiani

Darshana Khiani, a mom to two darling girls, is a computer engineer by day and writer by night. She makes every hour of the day count! Her literary career began with her children’s book review site and blog Flowering Minds, where she interviewed authors, kept a book report diary, and compiled reading roundups of South Asian picture books, middle grade books, and young adult literature. She has spent more than a decade working on the We Need Diverse Books Campaign, reviewing and promoting inclusive children’s literature that reflects our world. I am so hyped to interview my Versify sibling about her debut picture book HOW TO WEAR A SARI, which is set to release June 22, 2021!

Darshana, your debut picture book, HOW TO WEAR A SARI, sparkles with playfulness, humor, and joy. Kids will love this delightful story about a little girl who plays dress-up to prove how grown-up she is. Parents will chuckle over the hilarious results.  What inspired you to tell this story?

In the fall of 2016, I was planning out my outfits for the upcoming Diwali holiday season. I love the elegance of saris, but I was bemoaning how I never got the hang of wearing one. Then I wondered what it would be like if a young Indian girl wanted to play dress-up with her mom’s sari. *lightbulb* I knew I had a story. While many books depict playing dress-up with Western formal wear, there were none with a sari. And while there are a handful of sari books, I wanted this to be fun, light-hearted, and cheery like Fancy Nancy or the Birdie books. I wanted to show the universal themes of wanting to be older and dressing up but with South Asian flair.

Please tell us about your pre-publication journey. How did you feel when you signed with Kwame Alexander’s imprint Versify?

When I was a kid, I dreaded English class. It was my hardest subject. However, I always enjoyed creative writing assignments. They were my favorite. But seeing as I didn’t like writing essays and term papers, I pursued engineering in college. Fast forward 20 years, and I’m reading stacks and stacks of picture books to my kids and loving it. I began studying the craft of writing, joined SCBWI, took classes, attended conferences, and immersed myself into everything kidlit. After seven years, in the spring of 2018, I received the wonderful news from my agent that Versify wanted to buy HOW TO WEAR A SARI. I spoke to Kwame and my editor, Erika. I loved hearing their enthusiasm and that our visions for the story matched.         

Can you describe your revision process as you strove to bring HOW TO WEAR A SARI to the beautiful work of art it is today?

Thank you for those kind words. 😊 I started this story in the fall of 2016 and only went through 11 revisions and was in polished state by the summer of 2017. That’s quite fast for me. Most of my stories take at least two years or longer. This came well-formed from the beginning in terms of the voice and plot line. I usually do a few revisions on my own to make sure all the major pieces and vision of the story are there before sending it to my critique group. The aspect that took the longest to nail was the heart for the story. “Why did she want to wear a sari?” Once the big picture items are in place, I’ll put the story into a storyboard format so I can see all the spreads on one sheet of paper. This helps me with pacing, word repetition, and seeing the number of words on each spread.   

The illustrations are fresh, whimsical, and charming. What was it like collaborating with illustrator Joanne Lew-Vriethoff? How did you feel when you saw the final product?

As is the case in many picture book projects, I didn’t have any contact with Joanne. All communications went through my editor, Erika Turner, and book designer Natalie Fondriest. This book is bursting with energy and color thanks to Joanne and Natalie.  When I saw the first full sketch dummy. I was BLOWN away. Joanne made my spunky, fun-loving girl into a fully formed person with a personality. I loved the girl’s expressions and movement. I also really appreciated how Joanne used a variety of brown skin tones for the characters and included a mixed-race family.

What do you hope readers will take away from this book? 

I want kids to know that desire to show grownups you can do older things is a universal feeling. There will be fun moments and mistakes, but that’s all part of the experience. With the ending, I wanted kids to see that everyone young and old has flop moments, too. So keep on striving!

On what other projects are you working?

Truthfully, the writing has been a bit slow with everything that’s going on in the world. I’ve been leaning into family time, learning more about anti-Blackness in the South Asian community and engaging in the ongoing conversations with family and friends.

I am polishing up a picture book on compassion, which I’m excited about as it is near and dear to my heart. I have another picture book under contract, but it hasn’t been announced yet. Stay tuned. 😉

And now… the Grand Reveal! 

Darshana COVER.jpg

As we get closer to Darshana’s publication date, please stay tuned for details on her launch. Check out her website for details on forthcoming interviews, panels, and workshops. Be sure and add HOW TO WEAR A SARI on Goodreads! 


Darshana Khiani is a computer engineer by day and a children’s writer by night. She is a second-generation Indian American and enjoys writing funny, light-hearted stories with a South Asian backdrop. When she isn’t working or writing she can be found hiking, skiing, or volunteering. Darshana lives in the San Francisco Bay Area with her husband and two daughters. You can find her online at:

Website: www.darshanakhiani.com
Twitter@darshanakhiani
Instagram@darshanakhiani

richards_noni.jpg

NoNieqa Ramos is an educator who wrote THE DISTURBED GIRL’S DICTIONARY, a 2018 New York Public Library Best Book for Teens, a 2019 YALSA Best Fiction for Young Adults selection, and a 2019 In the Margins Award Top Ten pick. Hip Latina named THE TRUTH IS in its “10 of the Best Latinx Young Adult Books of 2019.”  Remezcla included TTI in the “15 Best Books by Latino and Latin American Authors of 2019.” Versify will release her debut picture books BEAUTY WOKE on January 1, 2021, and YOUR MAMA on April 6, 2021. NoNieqa is a proud member of The Soaring 20s and Las Musas. You can find her online at:

Website: https://nonieqaramos.com/
Twitter: @NoNieqaRamos
Goodreads: https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/50986523-your-mama
Instagram: @nonieqa.ramos/
Las Musas: https://www.lasmusasbooks.com/nonieqa-ramos.html

Happy Book Birthday, Invent-a-Pet!

By Vicky Fang

INVENT-A-PET (Sterling Children’s Books), written by Vicky Fang and illustrated by Tidawan Thaipinnarong

My debut picture book, INVENT-A-PET, illustrated by Tidawan Thaipinnarong, launches on June 2 from Sterling Children’s Books!

INVENT-A-PET tells the story of Katie, an ordinary girl who longs for an extraordinary pet—something more spectacular than a simple goldfish. One day, Katie comes home to find a gift from her mother: a mysterious machine designed to help her create that one-of-a-kind creature. Each time she feeds different items into the machine, out comes a marvelously colorful new animal—like a purple monkey, rainbow-spotted horse, and green bunny! But none of them is just right. Through trial and error, Katie figures out the formula for her absolutely perfect SURPRISE pet.

Why I Wrote It

I started writing children’s books to inspire and empower kids in STEAM (science, tech, engineering, art, and math), particularly girls and minorities. I’m a former product designer, and I’ve had so much fun creating things like DIY robots, buildings that play music, and interactive storybooks. For me, technology is magical, and I want kids to be able to see that too!

Vicky Fang and team at Google have a dance party with their DIY cardboard robots.

Vicky Fang and team at Google have a dance party with their DIY cardboard robots.

The Idea

If you asked me where the idea for INVENT-A-PET came from, I would have a hard time telling you.

The most direct answer is this: I keep a long list of random story ideas on my phone. At some point, I jotted down “mixed up animals” and at another point, I jotted down “Louisa’s Magnificent Mixing Machine.” One day, on an airplane flight (my favorite place to write), I thought to combine these two disconnected ideas, and the first draft of INVENT-A-PET was born!

INVENT-A-PET spread, ©2020 Sterling Children’s Books

But the thing is … if I look back through my life, some idea of pet mixing machines has been there for a long, long time. As a designer of kids’ experiences, often combining technology and education, mixed-up pets have dipped in and out of my consciousness many times before.

The first time that I have a record of it is in 2002, when I was in graduate school studying for my MFA in Design and Technology at Parsons School of Design in NYC. I was working with fellow students on a children’s educational software project. We created a game called PetSet that allowed you to create mixed-up pets by dragging and dropping different icons into a simple animated machine.

The next memory that I have is from 2003 or 2004, when I was working as a game designer at a small independent game design studio called Large Animal Games. We built an online game that created funny, mixed up dogs through a wacky machine.

And most recently, in 2017, I was working as a designer on kids’ experiences at Google, many of which were geared toward inspiring and empowering kids in STEAM. When I told a co-worker about my story, she said, “Oh, like Sound Pet.” I hadn’t made the connection, but at that very moment, I was the creative lead on a kids’ game that let you take care of a virtual mixed-up pet.

I’m sure there are probably more examples. Somehow, this idea was always close to me. That may sound like a strange thing to say about a wacky pet-mixing machine that teaches you STEAM concepts … and yet, it’s true. When they say, “Write what you know,” you may be surprised at what that might be!

The Takeaway

As I get deeper into my writing career, I’m finding that the ingredients that went into INVENT-A-PET hold true for my other books as well. Let’s take a look at those ingredients—or, rather “inputs,” as Katie would have us say!

  1. Usually, I find that a single idea isn’t rich enough to make a strong story. I often need to combine two or more ideas to add depth.

  2. I also need to be able to pull from a bench of rich experiences—which for me, so far, has been related to STEAM inspiration for kids.

  3. And then, after all that, it’s about writing a great story. Impossibly simple, right? (Or is that simply impossible?)

That, my friends, is my perfect formula for an extraordinary story. I hope this is somehow helpful to you on your quest for yours!

INVENT-A-PET spread, ©2020 Sterling Children’s Books

I am so excited to share INVENT-A-PET with the world, and looking forward to many more books to come.

Vicky Fang’s 2020 book titles

Book Details

INVENT-A-PET

by Vicky Fang, Illustrated by Tidawan Thaipinnarong

Pub Date: June 2
ISBN: 978-1-4549-3381-6
Publisher: Sterling Children's Books


Vicky Fang is a product designer who spent five years designing kids’ technology experiences for both Google and Intel, often to inspire and empower kids in coding and technology. Through that work, she came to recognize the gap in education and inspiration, particularly for girls and minorities. She began writing books to provide kids with accessible STEAM-inspired stories that they can read again and again, learning from characters they love. Her goal for her books is to inspire computer literacy for a wide range of kids—while letting their imaginations run wild with the possibilities of technology! Her debut books, LAYLA & THE BOTS (Scholastic early chapter book series) and INVENT-A-PET (Sterling picture book), are launching in Spring/Summer 2020 and feature courageous and innovative girls in STEAM. You can find Vicky on Twitter @fangmous or at her website  www.vickyfang.com.