Tuesday, June 9, 2026
Registration for SCBWI Virtual Summer Conference Opens June 11th!
Registration for the SCBWI Virtual Summer Conference opens Thursday, June 11th, at 10am Pacific /1pm Eastern!
The conference is the perfect place to pitch agents and editors, get your art in front of industry professionals, and grow your skills as a writer, illustrator, or translator. Register before July 6 to lock in early bird pricing!
Click HERE for the conference schedule, session descriptions, and registration information.
This year’s event features inspiring keynotes, industry panels, a special look at how AI is affecting our industry, plus twenty-three breakout sessions. There are sessions specifically for illustrators, novelists, nonfiction writers, graphic novel creators, picture book writers, and more!
The career-launching portfolio showcase offers illustrators an opportunity to get their art in front of art directors, agents, and editors, while writers can pitch their books directly to acquiring agents and editors. For those who crave the networking opportunities present at in-person events, the Virtual Coffee Lounge is a place where attendees can meet one-on-one or in small groups.
Attend from anywhere in the world! If you can’t attend live, each attendee will have access to video recordings of all sessions through September 13th.
Thursday, June 4, 2026
My First Picture Book Memory or The Magic and Power of Picture Books
I have loved picture books since my mom read the first board books to me as a toddler. They made me laugh, giggle, and feel instantly connected. From then on, picture books have been constant, reliable companions throughout my life; weaving in and out at times. I always cherished and treasured them because they were a source of comfort and a way to stay in touch with, and quietly nourish, the small child inside me.
Born and raised in a small town in Southern Germany, I still remember my excitement for preschool, especially when Miss Beate read to us. We were completely, hopelessly in love with her and obsessed with her long brown hair. It was so shiny and beautiful. She let us comb it, braid it, and occasionally create unique hairstyles you could call avant-garde-ish.
The real magic began when she opened a book. Miss Beate wasn’t just patient and kind; she was also a wonderful storyteller. The moment she said, “Who wants to see what book I brought today…?” the entire class joined her. We pretzeled our legs and all eyes were on her and the book. Once she settled into the Lesesessel (big, cozy reading chair), we couldn’t wait for the magic to happen. We were ready to be transported to enchanted forests, pirate ships, and countries far away. We lived for that moment every day.
My favorite picture book back then was Die bunte Flaschenpost, written by Lore Lehner and illustrated by Hetty Krist. First published by Herder Verlag in 1968, the book was reissued by Kerle Verlag in 2003 under the title Flaschenpost, schwimm übers Meer, this time with fresh, contemporary illustrations by Astrid Krömer.
The author, Lore Lehner (1935–2017), lived and worked in Germany, where she built a career bridging academic research and children’s literature. She earned her doctorate at the Ludwig‑Maximilians‑Universität München (my alma mater). When she became a mother, she turned her attention to writing for young readers. Die bunte Flaschenpost remains one of her best‑known titles, cherished both in its original 1968 edition and its later reinterpretation. Lehner continued to write and contribute to literary and scholarly life until her passing in 2017.
I have a very vivid memory of the original Flaschenpost, even though we read it so many years ago. It’s a rhyming picture book, a gentle, hopeful story of children connecting across the world via a message in a bottle. I never forgot the cover.
Jens and his father, a lighthouse keeper, live on a small island in the Baltic Sea. He is very lonely and wants to find friends, so he sends a message in a bottle to children around the world.
His message is simple.
“Who wants to be friends?
All the best, Jens.”
He rolls up the paper, sticks it in the bottle, puts a cork in it, and tosses it in the Baltic Sea.
The bottle travels to the Island of Ceylon (now Sri Lanka). A boy named Kim finds it at the beach and is very excited about the letter and the drawing of the boy inside. It is the first letter he ever received!
He adds himself to the drawing, seals it in the bottle, and throws it back into the ocean.
As the bottle travels around the world, Zaty from Madagascar, Nai-Ming from China, and Pepe from Mexico discover it on a beach near their homes, and the list of friends becomes longer and longer.
Somewhere in the ocean, an old whale swallows the bottle but has to spit it out because it’s too hard to digest. That’s when the Inuit boy Navsak finds it. He, too, draws himself and places the letter back in the bottle, seals it, and sends it on its way.
Guess what! The bottle actually comes back to Jens. He can’t believe how lucky he is to have so many new friends around the world now! You can feel his happiness radiating from the page.
I couldn’t get enough of this story. Intrigued by how strongly the drawings resembled my own, I drew countless messages, stuck them in a bottle, and, for quite a while, my friends and I imagined ourselves to be Jens and his friends from around the world. Pretend play was our favorite activity in Kindergarten. This book has stayed close to my heart all these years. It unlocked new worlds, cultures, animals, and ways of living. It also gave me something to hold on to when I felt alone. After we moved far from my beloved preschool and the friends I thought I’d grow up with, I was lost and heartbroken. It took me a long time to find my footing again. This story didn’t fix everything, but it steadied me and gave me hope when everything felt unfamiliar.
Life went on, and after graduating from high school, I completed my Bachelor of Science in Education in Germany before moving to the United States. Within a year, I obtained my Texas Teaching Certificate and began teaching second grade at a magnet school focused on math and science. I was so lucky! We developed our own literacy-based curriculum, and I was instantly immersed in American picture books and kidlit. I started collecting books for my own growing PB library. You can pretend it’s a classroom library, but deep inside, you know who those books are really for. Creating and working with this amazing team of teachers, writing this curriculum together became its own reading adventure, leading me to fall in love with more books. It opened my eyes to a whole new world.
When I became a parent, and my kids were little, I never missed the weekly story times at the local library or Barnes & Noble. I became friends with June, the woman who led the read-aloud on Tuesdays at the bookstore. Our family spent almost every Saturday at the library, reading, browsing for books, and schlepping home at least 15 new children’s books. What a wonderful way to spend family time and nourish a love for books and reading. I also enjoyed discovering more children’s books through my kids’ eyes and evolving interests and perspectives.
When the kids were older, I became a Reading Partners Tutor. The read‑aloud portion is, without question, my favorite part of the entire program. Those first 10 minutes spent together with a picture book, reading while checking in, laughing, having fun discussing the story, and learning and getting to know the students are special and invaluable.
Picture books are magical and powerful. They make a meaningful, positive difference and are amazing tools. Life is full of issues and emotions that can be tough to handle. Sometimes we can’t even express what we feel when everything seems unfair, sad, or we feel unseen, unimportant, disrespected, or overlooked. Reading a book can reveal and gently open a conversation that otherwise seems tough to start. It encourages problem-solving and helps address confusing feelings in a way that makes these issues easier to face. A main character, engaging words, and illustrations help to remove the problem just enough to make it approachable. Books can offer solutions, humor, comic relief, and a sense of familiarity, whether read alone or with someone else. What a great bonding opportunity for parents or teachers!
Do you have a favorite picture book?
If you are curious about my favorite or would like to hear a German read-aloud of my beloved Die Bunte Flaschenpost, you can watch the entire story on YouTube.
Karin Redclift is the Translation Coordinator for SCBWI SF South. She is a
German‑born creative writer, translator, and proofreader, raised in Southern
Germany. Her passion for children's books started in pre-school and deepened
when she began teaching. She specializes in writing and translating kidlit, loves
playing with words (German and English), and dreams of making the world a better
place, one sentence at a time. She is bridging cultures and generations through
storytelling, with publications including the German translation of Emily of
New Moon by L.M. Montgomery and an updated version of the German classic
Maya the Bee. Her flash fiction appears in the Bolts of Fiction anthology.
She also enjoys reading, knitting, drawing, Tai Chi, gardening, hiking, and chasing
her little rescue dog, Charlie.
Find her at www.KarinRedclift.com (sign up for the monthly newsletter).
Follow her on Instagram.
Tuesday, June 2, 2026
Remembering Mildred Pitts Walter
The Society of Children’s Book Writers and Illustrators (SCBWI), the children’s book world, and young readers worldwide mourn the passing of author and friend, Mildred Pitts Walter. She was 104 years old, and was still writing for children.
Born in 1922 in a small, segregated town in Louisiana, she eventually made her way to New Orleans and enrolled in Southern University. She earned a bachelor’s degree in English. In 1944, she moved to Los Angeles, where she worked briefly as a school clerk.
She married Earl Walter in 1947, and they both became active in civil rights. Walter, who passed away in 1965, became the national vice chair of CORE (Congress Of Racial Equity).
Mildred was an early member of SCBWI and frequently spoke at SCBWI events throughout the many years of her children’s publishing career.
Her passion for children’s literature was born when she became a teacher at a predominately African American school in Los Angeles. Disheartened that the only book in the school library featuring an African American child was Ezra Jack Keats, “The Snowy Day”, she wrote the publisher out of sheer frustration, requesting that more books feature characters who looked like the students in her classroom. The publisher wrote back, “Write them”. And that she did.
Her first book, “Lillie of Watts”, was published in 1969. Eventually, she went on to write more than 20 others, including “Justin and the Best Biscuits in the World” (1986) for which she won The Coretta Scott King Award. In 1996, she was inducted into the Colorado Women’s Hall of Fame, and she received the Jane Addams Children’s Book Award Honors for “Second Daughter: The Story of a Slave Girl”.
SCBWI Co-Founder and current SCBWI Impact and Legacy Fund Managing Director, Lin Oliver, had this to say about her longtime friend, Mildred Pitts Walter, “Mildred was a longtime member of the SCBWI Advisory Council, offering her wisdom about the necessity of representation and inclusion to all of our conversations. As an author, she was a pioneer in writing stories for and about black children in everyday modern life, not as historical figures. Her books changed the course of children’s literature.”
We mourn her loss while celebrating her long and productive life. The SCBWI was fortunate to have her as a colleague and friend for so many wonderful years. She will be missed, but long honored and never forgotten.
Thursday, May 28, 2026
Deep Dives with Merfolx: A Sparkling Interview with Jessica Love
Hi Jessica, I am so beyond excited for you to join us on the Official SCBWI Blog. The wonderful author/illustrator of Julián is a Mermaid, and Julián at the Wedding, please tell us a little about yourself, in your own words.
Thank you so much for having me, Justin. When I was about nine years old my answer to the question "what do you want to do when you grow up?" was actor, artist, writer. Which is a pretentious answer for a nine year old but oh well, I suppose I was a little bit pretentious, but I guess I meant what I said because I've done all three of those things professionally as an adult. My parents are both artists--my mom is a weaver, my dad is a potter, and my extended family on both sides is made up of highly creative people.
I didn't know you were a dancer! That makes me very happy. I am currently at work on the third Julián book in the series, and it is called, Julián is a Dancer. It's about that threshold moment when you enter a creative process with other people for the first time, and how intimidating it is at first but also how thrilling once the first step into the room has been taken.
When Julián is a Mermaid came out, everyone I know and who know the true me sent me the announcement. Not to exaggerate, but this is one of my favorite children's books ever. I've never felt more seen in a book. I, too, grew up in New York, had a secret love of mermaids, but unlike Julián, I didn't show my true love until I was older.
Wow, I love this question so much. It is incredibly, powerfully affirming to me to get to hear that from a reader, thank you so much.
As a New York, I've attended the Mermaid Parade for several years. It is sort of my Pride celebration. I've always loved the parade just from its sheer inclusiveness. Being a mermaids doesn't come with the expectations and standards of what it means to be "human." It is a celebration of all people, from all backgrounds, ages, body types, cultures, etc. What drives you as an artist to celebrate representation in your work and in the book space?
This is what I love about the Mermaid Parade too! Despite being a dress-up as a fantastical creature parade, it is its human-ness that is moving to me. I love that it's on a day when it's SO hot and it's in the direct sun so everybody is all sweaty, and kind of naked, and truly, truly the crowd is made up of a raucously heterogenous sample of New York Humans, I absolutely love it.
I just saw the announcement that Julián is a Mermaid will be making its way to become an animated feature, led by the Academy Award nominated director Louise Bagnall with Cartoon Saloon. How did it feel to be approached about the adaption and what are your hopes for the feature?
I am so excited for this film to come out. Louise and an absolutely incredible team of animators from all over the world have been working so hard on this for years and years. The script is written by Juliany Taveras, who is also a playwright and the way they managed to expand a 30 word story into a feature length film while maintaining the original bones of the house is a pretty awesome feat of ekphrasis. It's beautifully done, Cartoon Saloon is one of the last studios actually drawing everything by hand, which is really meaningful to me. A human hand was important in this story.
Last question, which I know I've personally pondered for ages, but if you were to sprout a tail right this second, what would it look like?
I'm so glad you asked. This season my tail is going to be like a black plum with the occasional scale of nacreous pearl, but my fins will be tipped in vermillion.
Tuesday, May 26, 2026
Introducing SCBWI Critique Groups
You've asked, and SCBWI has heard! Introducing the SCBWI Critique Groups! SCBWI is proud to announce that the beta version of their exclusive Critique Group program has officially launched!
Why Join a Critique Group?
Every creator reaches a point where an outside perspective becomes essential. A critique group gives you a trusted space to share your work and hear how it lands with others: what resonates with readers, what confuses them, and where your vision has room to grow. The conversations you have there won't just improve a manuscript or a spread; they can help sharpen how you think about storytelling itself. This is a member benefit that helps anyone at any stage of their development.
Read more about the SCBWI Critique Groups, its benefits, Code of Conduct, and more, HERE!
Thursday, May 21, 2026
Deep Dives with Merfolx: A Splashing Interview with Paul D Kellam
Your work explodes with color, movement, "flow and rhythm," something I love and am inspired by! You and I have spoken a bit about it, but I would love to hear about your process and what inspires you as an illustrator?
My process is not always streamlined, but I always aim for my art to dance off the page through movement and color. My compositions typically use a lot of “S” and triangle shapes to help lead the eyes of the viewer; as well as gradients with focal points being the most saturated bits. I’m heavily inspired by nature, haute couture, and people that I cherish. A lot of the snarky expression I draw are basically a mirror of me with my younger sisters, haha.
Bursting with color, your books also brim with a range of beautiful, colorful, and diverse characters. What are some of your thoughts and feelings when it comes to representation and why do you think it is important?
I believe community is key to a healthy and fulfilling life, no matter what area of your life it appears in. I consider you a big part of my art community or mermaid pod, if you will. Your generous spirit is such a light and I know you've cheered me on when I needed that extra push. Can you speak a bit about community, how it has shaped you and why it is essential to the process?
To see you occupy the spaces you do, in the way you do, with style, energy and sheer joyfulness, is revolutionary on so many levels. What would you say to younger Paul and how do you think he'd feel seeing you today?
Though I know you and I are merpeople in our souls, if you were to sprout a tail right this second, what would it look like?
Tuesday, May 19, 2026
SCBWI Resources: The SCBWI YouTube
Thursday, May 14, 2026
Diving Deep: Exploring Your Depths to Tap into Your Mer-Magic: MerMay Entry #2
In an industry with so many creators, stories, genres, etc, it is essential that you find your voice—your song that will help guide you through the dark depths as you discover treasure (golden nuggets of connection), conquer krakens (imposter syndrome and burn out), and discover the stories from deep within.
2. Solo Dates/ Art Outings
SO-LOW-DATES! I am such a fan of these. I love being by myself. As they say, "I am alone, not lonely." I love adventuring on my own, exploring new places, experiencing new things. I mean—how are you to know what your taste is, what you like and dislike, if you don't go out and discover it. I visit museums, galleries, bookshops, libraries. I go to the movies to see something new, sometimes something old. I am a huge theater goer! I try to see everything! Last year alone I saw every nominated Broadway show. First time ever!And I don't mind doing it myself.
3. Build your Artistic Library
This is a no brainer and I know if you're reading this, then I'm probably preaching to the choir but I try to read as much as I can. I also am a big advocate on finding those books that help you really grow into the person you wish to be. Find those books that you keep within arm's reach. Surround yourself with stories that resonate with you because like an echo in the ocean, sometimes we need something solid out there in the wilderness to have our voices reflected back at us. Here are some of my book recommendations as an artist and part-time human/merman:
Life Lessons: Two Experts on Death and Dying Teach Us About the Mysteries of Life and Living by Elisabeth Kübler-Ross & David Kessler
"Writing and Illustrating Children's Books For Publication: Two Perspectives" by Berthe Amoss & Eric Suben.
Tuesday, May 12, 2026
Register NOW for Inside the Illustrator's Studio!
Thumbnail sketches will be the foundation on which you build your story. They will be the map that leads you to your treasure. They will help you feel calm and happy. And they will keep you out of trouble! Please bring about a dozen pieces of 8.5” x 11” copier paper and a pencil to the session.
Tuesday, May 26, 2026: 1-2:30pm Pacific/ 4-5:30pm Eastern
Discover the secrets to creating a portfolio that attracts the attention of agents, editors and art directors.
Thursday, May 7, 2026
Embarking on Your Own Adventure: MerMay Entry #1
The ocean is a vast place. As deep as it is wide. Brimming with stunning and incredible creatures, full of numerous possibilities. And you, my little merling, are amongst this tapestry of wonder. With a simple map in your hands, and the depths before you, you start flipping your fins. But in what direction? You don't really know.
A great resource that I've found and have put in my personal grotto has been the Essential Guide to Publishing for Children. Updated yearly, it is full of "new and essential" articles that ranges from "maximizing your social media" and "creating book trailers" to "best practices in independent publishing, and grassroots promotion." Full of directories like The International Market Survey, and The Agents Directory, the Essential Guide is a great treasure map to lead you in the right direction.
Here are some other online resources I have used in the past: