Tuesday, August 12, 2025

The SCBWI 2025 Crystal Kite Award Winners


 Congratulations to all of the Crystal Kite Award Winners and Honor Winners!

Check out the authors and illustrators from all over who've won the 2025 Crystal Kite Award! You can order these amazing books HERE, as well at their links below! Cheers to those who continue to make beautiful works for children! 


Atlantic

Tricky Chopsticks 

By Sylvia Chen, illustrated by Fanny Liem

(Atheneum Books for Young Readers)

Honor Winner: 

Wind Is a Dance 

By Debra Shumaker, illustrated by Josée Bisaillon 

(Kids Can Press) 


California & Hawaii

The Man Who Didn't Like Animals 

By Deborah Underwood, illustrated by LeUyen Pham

(Clarion Books) 


Honor Winner:

The Night Market 

By Seina Wedlick, illustrated by Briana Mukodiri Uchendu

(Random House Studios) 

 

Midwest

A Little Like Magic 

Written and illustrated by Sarah Kurpiel

(Rocky Pond Books) 



Honor Winner:

Seeker of Truth: Kailash Satyarthi’s Fight to End Child Labor 

By Srividhya Venkat, illustrated by Danica da Silva Pereira

(little bee books)  

Midsouth

The Last Day Julian was My Best Friend 

By Jody Jensen Shaffer

(Two Lions) 


Honor Winner:

Stronger at the Seams 

By Shannon Stocker

(Blink, an imprint of HarperCollins Focus) 

New England

Small Things Mended 

By Casey W. Robinson, illustrated by Nancy Whitesides

(Rocky Pond Books) 


Honor Winner:

The Tree of Life: How a Holocaust Sapling Inspired the World 

By Elisa Boxer, illustrated by Alianna Rozentsveig

(Rocky Pond Books) 

New York

Five Stories 

Written and illustrated by Ellen Weinstein

(Holiday House) 



Honor Winner:

Building a Beak: How a Toucan's Rescue Inspired the World 

by Becca McMurdie

(Page Street Publishing) 

 

Southeast

Abuelita's Gift: A Día de Muertos Story 

By Mariana Ríos Ramírez, illustrated by Sara Palacios

(Knopf Books for Young Readers) 


Honor Winner:

Trunk Goes Thunk! 

By Heather Morris, illustrated by Chantelle Thorne and Burgen Thorne

(Gnome Road Publishing) 


Southwest

The Ofrenda That We Built 

By Jolene Gutiérrez & Shaian Gutiérrez, illustrated by Gabby Zapata

(Chronicle Books) 


Honor Winner:

Cactus Queen: Minerva Hoyt Establishes Joshua Tree National Park 

By Lori Alexander, illustrated by Jenn Ely

(Astra Young Readers) 

 

Texas & Oklahoma

Lupita's Brown Ballet Slippers 

By Steena Hernandez, illustrated by Melissa Castillo

(Beaming Books) 



Honor Winner: 

They Built Me for Freedom: The Story of Juneteenth and Houston's Emancipation Park 

By Tonya Duncan Ellis, illustrated by Jenin Mohammed

(Balzer + Bray) 


West

One Day This Tree Will Fall 

By Leslie Barnard Booth, illustrated by Stephanie Fizer Coleman

(Margaret K. McElderry Books) 





Honor Winner:

A Voice of Hope 

By Nadia Salomon, illustrated by London Ladd

(Penguin Random House) 

 

Australia, New Zealand, and Oceania

Happy All Over 

Written and illustrated by Emma Quay

(Little, Brown Books for Young Readers) 


Honor Winner:

Glow 

By Ross Morgan

(Walker Books) 

 

Canada & North America

Up, Up, Ever Up! Junko Tabei: A Life in the Mountains 

By Anita Yasuda, illustrated by Yuko Shimizu

(Clarion Books) 


Honor Winner:

Making Sense of Dog Senses: How Our Furry Friends Experience the World 

By Stephanie Gibeault, illustrated by Raz Latif

(Owlkids) 


Europe & Central, South and Latin America & Africa

Bear's Big Idea 

By Sandra Nickel, illustrated by Il Sung Na

(Carolrhoda Books) 



Honor Winner:

HaiCuba / HaiKuba 

By Lawrence Schimel & Carlos Pintado, illustrated by Juan José Colsa

(NorthSouth Books) 


Middle and East Asia

Listening to Trees 

By Holly Thompson, illustrated by Toshiki Nakamura

(Neal Porter Books) 


Honor Winner:

Good Old Days Grandpa 

By Shirley Waisman

(Tal-May) 


United Kingdom and Ireland

East Asian Folktales, Myths and Legends 

By Eva Wong Nava

(Scholastic) 

Honor Winner:

12 Ways to Get a Ticket to Space 

By Kate Peridot, illustrated by Terri Po

(Quarto Children’s Books Ltd.) 

Thursday, August 7, 2025

SCBWI: One Intro to Another, Learning from Each Other

Guest Post by Holly Thompson


I’m so grateful to Lee Wind for inviting me to be the guest blogger for August. Lee volunteered time, enthusiasm and talent to this SCBWI Blog for an incredible fourteen years! Thank you, Lee! And thank you Justin Campbell for stepping up as official SCBWI Blogger!


My early introductions to SCBWI went as follows:

When I was an undergrad, author and creative writing professor Corinne Demas recommended me to assist author Patricia MacLachlan in a summer writing program for children.


While assisting Author Patricia MacLachlan in that program, I met the invited guest author/illustrator Naomi Kojima, visiting from Tokyo.


Teaching at a K-9 school in New England, my colleague, children’s book author Amy Gordon, read my manuscripts and invited me to a Jane Yolen critique event.

           This is how SCBWI works–one introduction to another, one experience to another, learning from each other.


Banner for SCBWI Japan by Naomi Kojima


Jump forward over my first three years of teaching in Japan, to the NYU Creative writing program, to writing a novel, to teaching creative and expository writing at NYU and Brooklyn College, to freelance editing…a time period when only now and then did I allow myself to draft stories for children--because I thought that writing for adults was what real writers did. 


But when I moved to Japan a second time, I learned of an SCBWI event in Tokyo featuring prominent Japan children’s book editor Akiko Beppu, and at that event, I re-met author/illustrator Naomi Kojima. 


Soon, on top of a full-time job and raising bilingual children, I was involved in building SCBWI Japan with Naomi Kojima, John Shelley, Mariko Nagai, Avery Fischer Udagawa and many other talented children’s book creators. I became Regional Advisor, then Co-Regional Advisor and Co-Editor of our region’s newsletter. Yes, I was always exhausted, but this team made things happen!


SCBWI Japan team of many years that stepped down in 2023-24: Naomi Kojima, Mariko Nagai, Avery Fischer Udagawa, Holly Thompson


Our SCBWI Japan team aimed to hold events 11 months of the year. We invited Japan-based creatives and children’s book experts to present to our chapter, plus overseas editors, art directors, authors, illustrators and translators visiting Japan. We held regular creative exchanges; gathered for sketch- and word-crawl outings; held KidLit Create Days; developed the SCBWI Japan Translation Day; and initiated a five-month SCBWI Japan MG/YA Novel Revision program. 


Participation in cultivating, growing and tending the SCBWI Japan chapter involved volunteer time on top of my full-time job. Yet by planning and running events, participating in Creative Exchange critique sessions, inviting and interacting with speakers, and actively helping our SCBWI Japan region to thrive, we, the SCBWI Regional Team and all the enthusiastic members, met month after month and learned from authors, illustrators, translators, editors, agents, art directors, and educators. We gained deep understanding about crafting works for children and teens around the globe, and we grew an active community of supportive creatives–giving us constant sources of inspiration, information, and encouragement in our own creative endeavors.

Logo for SCBWI Japan
by Dionnie Takahashi

Volunteering in a small SCBWI region such as SCBWI Japan, means that illustrators, authors and translators often participate in events together, learning from each other across creative fields. In our creative exchange events, illustrators have become stronger authors, authors have learned from illustrators where to write less, and translators have learned from author’s ears and illustrator’s eyes where text can be sharper or clearer.


Of course, SCBWI teams shift. Volunteers step up and step down. Some global chapters wane. But SCBWI Japan continues to thrive. 


Now, during work trips back to Japan, one of my great joys is to attend events led by the current SCBWI Japan Team–Mari Boyle, Alec McAulay, Kazumi Wilds and Susan Jones–to soak in the creative energy they impart, and connect with long-time SCBWI Japan friends and meet new members of the group. 


Current SCBWI Japan Team: Alec McAulay; Kazumi Wilds; Mari Boyle, Susan Jones

For me, volunteering with SCBWI has been a treasured learning journey of children’s book creation–via one introduction to another, one experience to another, one conversation to the next, learning from one another. Step up and volunteer when you have the chance--you’ll gain lifelong friends, mentors and opportunities.


August 2025 SCBWI Blog posts by Holly Thompson

August 7 SCBWI: One Intro to Another, Learning from Each Other 
August 14 AFCC: SCBWI Opportunities in Asia
August 21 Translation and Reading the Wide World of KidLit

August 28 Observe, Experience, Research, Write–The Impact of a Teen Internship

 

Posted by Holly Thompson hatbooks.com



Tuesday, August 5, 2025

Interview with the Stephen Mooser Member of the Year Award Winner: Debbie Ridpath Ohi

Once again, CONGRATULATIONS to you, Debbie, on your Stephen Mooser Member of the Year Award. You are most deserving!

The Official SCBWI Blog sent Debbie some questions! Check out her answers below!


How does it feel to be the Stephen Mooser Member of the Year Award winner?

Incredibly honoured. I owe so much to the SCBWI and its amazing community, including the first big break that jumpstarted my children’s book career.

I was also deeply moved by this message from Lin Oliver:

“Hi Debbie,

I’m so thrilled that you were chosen as member of the year. This award means so much to me, since it awards people who give back to our community, and it also honors Steve, who worked for fifty years to build the SCBWI with humility and love. You are the perfect choice to receive this award…..full of energy and life and talent and a real spirit of giving. I send you much love and heartfelt congratulations.

As ever,

Lin”

What inspires you as a creator?

Right now? Reading through highlights and takeaways on the SCBWI Conference Blog as well as watching video recordings of sessions I missed seeing live, or want to watch again. One of the advantages of a virtual conference is having this option! While I do miss seeing people in person, it was always so hard having to choose between different sessions that were happening at the same time. With virtual, we can still watch them ALL.

I also find it important to always make time for creative play and experimentation away from the stage.

You always have your finger on the pulse of the KidLit world. From championing other creators, to guiding and sharing resources, I want to know— how to do you make time for it all, and what keeps you going so strong? Because I want to be like you when I grow up!


Thanks so much for the kind words, Justin. I don’t feel as I have have my finger on the pulse of the KidLit world, though it may look like that to some. 🙂

So much, I find, has to do with learning how to say no….even if it means sometimes missing out on fun stuff, or disappointing people. I’ve also learned that I’m better equipped to help support others if I prioritize my mental health, to put on my own oxygen mask first. I’ve learned how to celebrate JOMO (Joy Of Missing Out).

During your acceptance speech, you listed some takeaways from your experiences as a KidLit creator. What were they?

  1. Do not despair if you feel invisible or that you’re spinning your wheels right now. Celebrate every success, no matter how small. Reflect on gratitude. Look ahead.
  2. Keep learning, no matter where you are in your career. I still find the SCBWI continues to offer SO much in its resources, events, and community.
  3. You can learn something from everyone, whether pre-published or published. Be authentic. Be kind.
  4. To authors and publishers who post about illustrated books or use art in any kind of promo, including cover reveals: PLEASE CREDIT THE ILLUSTRATOR (and book designer).
  5. Send good karma out into the universe, and it will come back to you.

And if you could be one dessert, what would you be?

Red velvet cupcake with cream cheese frosting.

***

Congratulations, again! You make the KidLit world shine so bright and thank you for taking the time to chat with me! Visit Debbie's website, www.debbieohi.com, and follow her on Bluesky at @debbieohi.com, to learn more about her and her fantastic work!

Thursday, July 31, 2025

Quirky Questions for Kidlit Authors: Guest Post #4 by Laura Segal Stegman - Laura Taylor Namey

Young Adult Author Laura Taylor Namey: TRIPLE CROWN

 

“I need to hang out with Jane Austen because I just want to hear exactly how she came up with this Mr. Darcy person. I want to know all about him. I want to know his origin story in her head…Give me Jane and a latte and six hours, and we're good.”

 

By Laura Segal Stegman

 

 
Click Here to Watch 

 

Check Out All Four Posts in July!

 VIDEO TRANSCRIPT

This interview has been edited for length and clarity.

 

LAURA SEGAL STEGMAN

Hi, everyone. I'm Laura Segal Stegman, author of the Summer of L.U.C.K. trilogy, and I'm presenting four author conversations on SCBWI's blog in July.

My guest this week is Laura Taylor Namey, the New York Times and international bestselling author of a number of young adult novels featuring quirky teens learning to navigate life and love, including The Library of Lost Things and A Cuban Girl's Guide to Tea and Tomorrow, which has been adapted for film. Her next book, If We Never End, is coming next year. A proud Cuban-American, she's a former teacher who says she finds herself wishing she was in London or Paris. But she's here today with us. So hi, Laura. It's a good name, yeah?

LAURA TAYLOR NAMEY

Hi, Laura. Yeah!

LS

So we're going to do a triple crown of questions, starting with, do you have any suggestions for people who'd love to write a book for young readers in your genre?

LTN

I sure do. Always, my number one tip is to read widely in the genre and age group that you want to write in, whether that's middle grade, young adult, picture books, anything like that in the age group. And then choose the genre within that age group that you love, whether it's contemporary or sci-fi, high fantasy, low fantasy, whatever you choose, and just read, read, read until you think you've read too many. And then keep reading five more books, or ten more. And then also read outside your genre, because sometimes if you're writing YA contemporary romance, if you read a horror novel, you can get some amazing ideas on how to amp up stakes or plot stakes. No pun intended there. You can take all these elements that writers do so beautifully across genres, and you can mix them into the genre that you want to do.

Study those books. Then take your top five titles that you think are wonderful and try to articulate to yourself in a notebook or document why you think they're the best. Is it because of the prose level? Is it because of the stakes? Is it because of the characterization? Or is there a certain thing that just makes it have this special sauce for you? List those things out. And then as you go forward, just write, write, write, and try to emulate those things by incorporating them into your work.

LS

That's great advice, such great suggestions. I read a lot in middle grade. But every time I've gone out of that genre, like when I read The Library of Lost Things that you wrote, I just loved it. And it did give me a lot of insight into how to articulate certain things that I hadn't thought of doing that way.

LTN

Well, thank you. Appreciate that.

LS

The next question is, if you could have coffee with any author, dead or alive, who would it be?

LTN

This is so easy. I need to hang out with Jane Austen because I just want to hear exactly how she came up with this Mr. Darcy person. I want to know all about him. I want to know his origin story in her head. I would probably talk her ear off about that. So that's just really basic and simple of me, but give me Jane and a latte and six hours, and we're good.

LS

Brilliant. That is brilliant. Okay, and to wrap things up, tell us about one of the times someone who read your work got in touch and what that meant to you.

LTN

Other than Reese Witherspoon sending me a letter about how much she loved my book?

LS

Tell us about that!

LTN

Yeah, being in Reese's Book Club, she does write a personal note to every author she picks as part of her family, which is the loveliest thing. And when you're writing your draft, and you get an email, and in the top header is her email address, something happens to you. That was one of the coolest moments ever. She told me all of the things she enjoyed. For me, being such a fan of hers when I was growing up, watching her movies, being a fan of someone who creates beautiful things… for her to say something that I created meant something to her was one of the best days of my life. So that was a really cool one. 

 

Laura Taylor Namey

As far as fans, I love to meet readers at festivals or at signings or book launches or anything like that. And I remember this one lovely gentleman at YALLFest brought a letter from his sister who couldn't come, and he stood in my line forever. He was trying to track me down just to give me this note that was handwritten in pencil. It had the cutest little pictures and all these things around it. This girl couldn't come to the festival to see me or any of her favorite authors. And she just had to tell me how much one of my books in particular meant to her and how it helped repair a relationship. And that was something that touched me so much. It was like, this is why you do this. It was so joyful. So I recorded a little video note for her and got to send that back to her. So if you're that person, thank you! That means a lot to me, and I still have it.

LS

That's beautiful! Thank you for telling both those stories. Really touching. Thank you so much! Laura’s website has all kinds of information about her wonderful books! Look for links to her site and socials in the show notes. Thanks again!

LTN

Thank you.

 

Website www.laurataylornamey.com

IG https//www.instagram.com/laura_namey/

Tiktok https//www.tiktok.com/@laurataylornamey

 

Laura Taylor Namey is the New York Times and international bestselling author of young adult fiction including Reese's Book Club pick A Cuban Girl's Guide to Tea and Tomorrow. A proud Cuban-American, she can be found hunting for vintage treasures and wishing she was in London or Paris. She lives in San Diego with her husband and two children. This former teacher writes young adult novels featuring quirky teens learning to navigate life and love. She holds a BA in Elementary Education from the University of San Diego and is the winner of the Peggy Miller Award for excellence in young adult fiction. A Cuban Girl's Guide to Tea and Tomorrow has been adapted for film.

Laura Segal Stegman is the author of Summer of L.U.C.K., Ready or Not, and The Chambered Nautilus, a middle-grade trilogy from Young Dragons Press, all with Readers' Favorite Five Star reviews. She has been a presenter/panelist at literary events including NCTE (National Council of Teachers of English), Orange County Children’s Book Festival, Society of Children’s Book Writers and Illustrators’ (SCBWI) SoCal Harvest Day, San Diego Writers Festival, and LitFest in the Dena. She also does school visits and such events as the STEM Teacher Summit and serves as a judge for writing competitions sponsored by Society of Young Inklings, among others. As a long-time publicity consultant, she created PR Tips for Authors, which has been presented by The Writing Barn, SCBWI, and elsewhere. Non-fiction writing credits include work in Los Angeles Times and School Library Journal’s Teen Librarian Toolbox, among others. www.LauraStegman.com

Laura Segal Stegman