Thursday, July 31, 2025

Portfolio Showcase Summer Conference 2025

Portfolio Showcase 

Summer Conference 2025

You can now access the 2025 Summer Conference Portfolio Showcase! I took a gander through and WOW, were there so many amazing entries this year! There were so many to choose from but here are some that really spoke to me and my sensibilities! Check out their websites as well!

Katria Raden 

www.katriaraden.com

Kate Phillips 

katemariephillips.com

Leah Gilbert

 leah-gilbert.com

Hayley Cleary 

www.hayleyclearyart.com/

Merrill Rainey 

www.littlerainey.com 

Katherine Julie Lin 

www.katherinejulie.com

Danamarie Hosler 

www.danamariehosler.com

Ginger Ngo 

gingerngo.com

On Saturday, at the end of the conference, the winners of the Portfolio Showcase will be announced! 

Did you know that the winners will be a part of the Bologna Children's Book Fair? 

"Images from the Gold, Silver, and Bronze winners’ portfolios will be displayed in a special showcase in the SCBWI booth at the 2026 Bologna Children’s Book Fair along with their name, website, and country of origin. There will be more than 30,000 people and 1500 exhibitors from 100 countries attend this renowned book fair."



1 Gold Award (1) winner will receive:
- Free admission to the next Virtual Summer Conference,
- Two phone/virtual meetings with art directors/agents who will provide guidance and feedback on your portfolio,
- A one year renewal of your SCBWI membership, and
- Two images from your portfolio will be showcased in the SCBWI booth at the 2026 Bologna Children’s Book Fair.*

1 Silver Award winner will receive:
- Two phone/virtual meetings with art directors/agents who will provide guidance and feedback on your portfolio,
- A one year renewal of your SCBWI membership, and
- One image from your portfolio will be showcased  in the SCBWI booth at the 2026 Bologna Children’s Book Fair.*

2 Bronze Award winners will receive:
- One phone/virtual meeting with an art director or agent who will provide guidance and feedback on your portfolio.
- One image from the winner’s portfolio will be showcased in the SCBWI booth at the 2026 Bologna Children’s Book Fair.* 


GOOD LUCK to all those who submitted! It is courageous to put yourself out there and you should all be so proud! And don't forget to check out all the entries through the conference!

Orientation for Newcomers with Jolie Stekly

Former SCBWI Member of the Year (if not Millenium*) Jolie Stekly is back with her buoying, opening conference orientation session. Jolie, whose Washington State short horror story appears in last year's The Haunted States of America anthology, helped connect over 250 of us this afternoon in her session and invites all attendees to meet up in the Coffee Lounges she'll be hosting this weekend, check your schedule for Zoom links.

Just being able to show up and pay attention to the conference sessions this weekend is a huge privilege and gift for both new and returning attendees. But in addition to general sessions, the now sold-out optional opportunities to share your written or illustrated work in any of the add-on Roundtables or showcases can be overwhelmingly stressful. Jolie assuages sharer's jitters by reminding them that they've already done the work and submitted it so, "Take a deep breath, be excited, be proud of your work. Show up and share." 

For any session where you are pitching or in dialogue with others Jolie reminds us that, "You get to learn so much by listening to everybody else, but we can tend to put ourselves in a bit of a nervous bubble . . . So I would encourage you to be incredibly present with everybody in the "room", because it will serve you well and it will help you get out of your own head. And I also want to encourage you to take some very specific notes for yourself."

Jolie reminds us all to keep track of the positive remarks we hear about our work this weekend as well as what you might hear about your peers' work and go out of your way to share and remind other of the good stuff about themselves as well. 

Jolie encouraged Orientation attendees to take a moment today before the conference kicks off tomorrow to brainstorm some achievable goals or intentions for the weekend.



*When she's not orientating or blogging the SCBWI conferences, Jolie is still helping authors every day with their craft and mindset via her online classes and consults.



UnBanning Books: Bold Creators Take a Stand - Keri Lambert / Dan Novack / Laurent Linn

 



Laurent Linn: 
"It affects us all, no matter what state or country you live in" 
Book bans can be overwhelming to understand and easy to feel helpless against. But as our moderator, Laurent was there to discuss the current state of book bans and acquire tools to fight back. 
"But don't forget, there is much hope."



Laurent Linn: Let's start with introductions. Tell us who you are and what brought you to speak on this panel?

Keri Lambert:  
Keri Lambert is the Vice President of the Rutherford County Library Alliance in Rutherford County, Tennessee. In 2023, Rutherford County had a decency ordinance go into effect that basically made it illegal to be homosexual in public. Keri knew that that was not good, and thought everyone would be out marching in the streets, and nobody was. Then she realized they were using that decency ordinance to start censoring our libraries. That is when Keri, along with her comrades, started Rutherford County Library Alliance. They started with their public library board, then their school board who started to ban even more books. They have been fighting on a local and state level, as most of the fights that are local are coming from state law. RCLA has testified and were able to stop two of those anti-library bills from passing which they celebrate those wins because there's so much. Tennessee has had nearly 1,400 books removed in the last year. RCLA are here to support their librarians because the librarians are being "threatened, harassed, intimidated. And they can't speak up for themselves. So we exist to support our librarians, as well as support our community. And the freedom to read."

Dan Novack:
Dan Novack is the Vice President and Associate General Counsel at Penguin Random House and it's been his privilege to work on book bans the last couple years. They are plaintiffs in four lawsuits at the moment, in three different states. They are supporting about a dozen other cases nationwide through information sharing and helping to connect people. 

"We've been trying to help states that want to do the right thing, to channel that instinct in a productive way. We've been trying to talk to states that are trying to still do the bad thing, don't get me wrong. They're hard to dissuade."

He spoke about Rhode Island recently passing a bill. There's no models that were existing for how to pass a good law for Freedom to Read and though it is kind of assumed because of the First Amendment, and that you wouldn't need a fancy state law for it, now is no longer the case. 
It's been "eye-opening" the last couple years but they've been involved in writing and helping to support these bills, and other "little rays of sunshine" in an otherwise difficult environment.

Laurent Linn: What is book banning? What does that mean? It's a general term that is used accurately, and inaccurately. There's challenges, there's censorship. There's a lot of discussion. Can you break this down?

Keri Lambert:
"The media really likes to use the term "book banning" but I've been working really hard here on classifying it as restricting access to information...You're guaranteed the right to access information." 

And some people might respond that it isn't "banned" if you can order it on Amazon but that sentiment comes from a privileged place because not every child has the opportunity to go to a store, or money to order books. And they are put at a disadvantage to access those materials due to the lack of resources. You have a right to browse. You can't prevent anyone from accessing what they want. So, we really like to rephrase it to restricting access to information, and you can't do that.

Dan Novack:
"We're getting calls from academic buyers, asking 'Do you have a safe list? Can you give me a list of the books that are not going to get anyone in trouble here?' And, you know, our response is 'If we gave something like that to you, that would imply the existence of the dirty list, right?"So, they haven't supplied a list like that, but that's the pressure they're feeling. 

Four years ago, during the Black Lives Matter protests, it really intensified. That is when Dan saw the earliest book bans on college campuses, where authors were getting disinvited. And then it metastasized into what we're seeing now, venturing out into anti-LGBT, where "sex" is being treated as a special category of material. "That is ostensibly neutral, but it is really just this one neat trick that they figured out can eliminate all the LGBT books, because they're coming-of-age stories" which may have some sexual content. And so, what it amounts to is a flattening. It says everything about sex is conceptually inappropriate. When you eliminate a book with a single reference to sex, regardless of what context it's in, regardless of what else is in the book, that book has to be pulled in states like Iowa, Idaho, Florida. Utah, South Carolinathe list goes on and on. 

They don't care that that creates a list of hundreds or even thousands of individual titles in those states. It's like a nuclear bomb that they drop, because they're really upset about a handful of titles that the conservative movement, Moms for Liberty, has deemed unacceptable for anyone. It's this outsized reaction. 

And people don't understand or appreciate that kids don't buy books. They require intermediaries- that's parents, educators, librarians. It's a trusted category of people. Nonetheless, they're being disempowered, and because they are the intermediaries, people don't understand that the livelihood of the children's book author and illustrator community is in these spaces. And if you eliminate their right to access the material, in the way that they are supposed to access it, it's coming after free speech.

And on the flip side of it, as authors and illustrators, you really are supposed to have the right to do whatever you want, unless it touches a very specific category. Which is pornography, or better understood in the law, as obscenity. So that is why you see the word pornography thrown around, because it takes the First Amendment out of the equation. And once it's out of the equation, we can do what we wish with it. We can ban it, we can criminalize it, even. And so that is why everything gets shunted into that category, because otherwise the author and illustrator have the First Amendment right. And their right to speak is co-extensive with the right to be read. That's your right to access the material, your right to speak.

And the work is calibrated for the understanding and comfort of the grade it is intended for. These challenges don't care about the work of the authors and the publishers to make sure that the material's calibrated for their intended audience. They don't care that there are professional reviews. So it's all about flattening and making it a binary. Sex or no sex.

Laurent Linn: Lightning round. Words of hope.

Keri Lambert: 
"First of all, show up. I swear it makes a huge difference. Just show up. At your local public library, board meetings, school board meetings, committee meetings, your state legislator."
"Show up, hold a sign, put your hand up. I held my hand up for an hour, and they gave me 3 minutes on the floor to speak to them."
"The other thing that really helps is to get a library card. Get multiple library cards for all the libraries in your area, and check books out. Check out the books that have LGBTQ+ themes. Get books that are written by persons of color, that are telling whatever stories tend to get restricted in your community. Sign them out regularly. Get your friends to sign them out, because circulation numbers can affect whether a book is removed from your library or not. So, get a library card and check out books."

Dan Novack:
"Talk to kids. There are high school students that are plaintiffs suing their state governments. I think for the first time ever. They're the brightest, most impressive young people I've ever met. If we can just turn over this country or this planet to them, like, mildly intact, they will do great things with it. So the more we look to the young people to talk about what they want to see and read, and how they know how to think for themselves."

"Hear from the kids directly. We're all talking about kids, but we don't really bring them into the conversation a lot. But there are people in your communities that are outstanding self-advocates themselves. And they're incredibly energizing to be around, and part of my ability to sustain the work that I've been doing emotionally is that I love these kids."

Laurent Linn:
That's a wonderful note to end on, and they are also our superheroes. That's why we do what we do. Thank you all. This has been enlightening, inspiring, horrifying, everything we can think of.
But so important, and truly, your expertise and everything you've all had to say is invaluable. Thank you.

Sarah Baker: 
Thank you, everyone. Um, your passion on the topic just made it so powerful. We all have more to talk about with everyone in your community, in your circles, and I just want to echo what everyone said, to get out in real life. Take any kind of action. Especially after hearing all of the very real repercussions of restricting access to information for young people. Thank you all so much!

There was so much to cover so don't forget to catch the full video in a day or two on SCBWI's YouTube Channel!

Below are some resources shared within during the Zoom panel. Get involved, speak out and take action! 


RESOURCES







Unbanning Books: Bold Creators Take A Stand - Jerry Craft / Gayle Forman / Betsy Gomez

Fantastic panel on book bans to start off the 2025 SCBWI Summer Conference. Here are summaries of three of the panelists' contributions, but FREE REPLAY ACCESS to the entire panel video is available by registering for it at scbwi.org, the video will also be on the SCBWI Youtube channel once it's been uploaded.

Panelist Jerry Craft is the author-illustrator of the bestselling graphic novels New Kid and its companion book, Class Act. New Kid was the winner of the 2020 John Newbery Medal, among other honors. 

Jerry starts off the panel talking about his first experiences with his books being banned: "My books look at the innocence of middle school—no sex, drugs, profanity, or anything like that . . . So when I first heard that my books were being banned, I was as surprised as anyone, because I had always tried to do family comic strips, family comic books . . . I have received more invites and interviews for being banned than for some of the awards that I have won, which is definitely bittersweet." While Jerry feels obligated to talk about the bans, he wishes he didn't have to to the degree that he has done and is thankful to be a part of the discussion today on how we begin to go about the process of unbanning.

Gayle Forman, renowned YA/MG author, tells us about her breakout book from 16-17 years ago, IF STAY being challenged: 'That was an innocent time when books were just challenged for sex, the book bans we have seen in the last 6 to 7 years are an entirely different matter. . . When you look behind the book banning movement, a lot of what is/was fueling this is an effort to privatize public education, something that used to be a common good that both sides of the political spectrum, all sides, supported . . . The majority of Americans support the freedom to read and we are in a situation, both here and in so many other places, where a small minority get to ram things down the throat of this country that are universally unpopular."

Betsy Gomez is the Assistant Director of the ALA's Office for Intellectual Freedom. The office has been working in this space and tracking book bans in libraries (school and public) since 1967. ALA has had a Banned Books Week since 1982. UNITE AGAINST BOOK BANS, is an ALA initiative for public action on behalf of libraries that we can all join today. 

Betsy brings up her work experience with the Comic Book Legal Defense Fund: "Comics, historically, are particularly vulnerable to censorship and bans. 2021 saw a sharp spike in censorship around the country. It is organized and insidious and we need to band together to get through this." Betsy points out that the censors' language today is from the same 'playbook' censorship groups used in the 1950s when censoring comics.

The panel discusses the use of the term 'book ban' as a catchall for censorship, but go on to explain the differences between challenges, bans, and censorship by exclusion. Betsy also shares, "Several states have passed laws requiring age limitations, targeting specific types of content, and a lot of these laws are intentionally vague to facilitate what we often refer to as soft censorship, or self censorship. When library workers and educators don't understand the parameters of the law, they tend to react out of fear and and understandably so, and remove materials preemptively, or decide not to order materials because they might be controversial."

To learn more about book bans and how you can help fight censorship, check out the summaries of the other panelists' on the Official Conference blog and be sure to check back on the SCBWI Youtube channel for the free replay of the entire session

Ending on words of hope, from Jerry: "Even having one of your own kids write to an author reminding them why they are doing this. That one letter will counteract three dozen hate emails threatening to ban their book." Jerry centers the child reader again in this fight over censorship, "Kids are begging to be seen, especially in books where they are not the victims." And in better news, Jerry's NEW KID was recently picked for a Virginia school's One Book, One School reading program in which every 6th grader got their own copy. 

Gayle Forman urges attendees to "Write the story that needs to be written, unpack your own self censorship. Publishers continue to support books that do not bend the knee. Penguin Random House has taken a leadership role." And other publishers are encouraged to fight! Authors and illustrators can join Authors Against Book Bans as Gayle reminds us, "It's critical we work collectively and it is so important to work with local boards and entities as well as larger regional or national groups."

What gives Betsy Gomez hope: "All the advocates out there. Find the people in your community. No, you are not alone, this is happening everywhere. Reach out to ALA, reach out to your peers. We've been here before, the censors' language is the same playbook they used in the 1950s when censoring comics. We can get through this if we stick together."

Final words from Gayle Forman: Online activism is not enough. The majority of Americans support the freedom to read but do not know what is happening or what to do about it. 


Wednesday, July 30, 2025

The 2025 Virtual Summer Conference STARTS tomorrow!

 The 2025 Virtual Summer Conference begins tomorrow! 


We kick off our jam-packed weekend with Translators Meetup with Claire Storey from 07:00 AM - 08:00 AM (PDT) where "translators of children’s literature—published and aspiring—are welcome to this meetup featuring Claire Storey, a PAL member of SCBWI based in Derby, England, hosted by Avery Fischer Udagawa."

Followed by the UnBanning Books Panel: Bold Creators Take a Stand from 2:00 pm to 3:00 pm (PDT). Free and open to the public, you can register HERE
"Join top creators and industry leaders for a bold conversation on book bans, legal fights, and the power of stories that must be heard."


And ending with Orientation for Newcomers with Jolie Stekly from 04:00 PM - 05:00 PM (PDT). For all those who might be feeling overwhelmed and would love to know how this all works, look no further! Jolie will be hosting the orientation that will get you excited and prepared who what's ahead, making sure you make the best of your experience!


Meet Team Blog Summer 2025 and our "support team!" 

As the new Captain of the SCBWI blog, I am so excited and grateful to have these two amazing humans joining me to officially blog the conference! When I first began blogging, under the leadership and guidance of Lee Wind, Jolie and Jaime were right next to me, helping me find my way and I'm so thankful to have them with me during the first foray as captain! 

As the Beatles sang:
"Oh, I get by with a little help from my friends!"

During our meeting last week, amidst all the busy business that one who businesses, businesses (say that five times fast), our "emotional AND technical support staff" came to make sure we were staying on task! What would we do without them?!

Meet Jolie's incredibly sweet, Clyde, my little pirate, Edward Gigi Teach, and Moira Rose, Jaime's dynamic diva.
Top left to right: Jolie Stekly, Justin Campbell, Bottom center: Jaime Temairik, all caressing and holding their pets!

So come on, what are you waiting for? Grab your support staff member, some water and treats (for you and the staff), your notebook and let's GET INTO IT!

REGISTER TODAY!


Ready to take your children’s book career to the next level? Wherever you are in your publishing journey, the Virtual Summer Conference provides an opportunity for growth, creativity, and connection. Dive into every aspect of the children’s book world, from writing and illustrating to translating, marketing, and self-publishing. Put your art in front of industry pros in the career-launching Portfolio Showcase. And get inspired by sessions tailored for illustrators, picture book authors, nonfiction writers, graphic novel creators, and more—no matter your path or publishing background. Best of all? You’ll have access to all 50+ sessions until September 14th, so you can learn and grow at your own pace. Join us and invest in your passion. It’s time to bring your stories to life! REGISTRATION IS NOW OPEN.