Showing posts with label Don Tate. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Don Tate. Show all posts

Friday, August 1, 2025

Creating Winning Picture Book Biographies with Don Tate

 Don Tate is an award-winning author and/or illustrator of numerous critically acclaimed nonfiction biographies for kids including (this is a partial list!) Carter Reads The Newspaper, No Small Potatoes: Junius G. Groves and his Kingdom in Kansas, Whoosh! Lonnie Johnson’s Super-Soaking Stream of Inventions, The Amazing Age of John Roy Lynch, Poet: The Remarkable Story of George Moses Horton, It Jes’ Happened: When Bill Traylor Started To Draw, Strong As Sandow: How Eugen Sandow Became The Strongest Man on Earth, William Still and his Freedom Stories: Father of the Underground Railroad, Jerry Changed The Game! How Engineer Jerry Lawson Revolutionized Video Games Forever, and Swish! The Slam-Dunking, Alley-Ooping, High-Flying Harlem Globetrotters.


In today's fantastic session on crafting picture book biographies Don demonstrates the power of finding your next nonfiction story by looking for what was missing from your own childhood library and shining a light on the role models you wish you'd been able to read about when you were growing up. 

Little Don!

Don, growing up in Iowa, did not see black men as heroes in the books of his school or public libraries—in highschool he was assigned to read European folktales, Edgar Allan Poe, Thoreau, Steinbeck, Hemingway. Don felt like these books weren't for him, but for his white friends. And that didn't change after college when Don's new job as a book designer for an educational publisher had him designing guides for, you guessed it, European folktales and books by Edgar Allan Poe, Thoreau, Steinbeck and Hemingway.  But that publisher also had him designing a guide for a book he'd never seen before, Black Boy by Richard Wright.


It was the first time Don had seen a black male centered in a book, the first book he could really relate to. Don says that Wright's autobiography saved his life and is what made him a reader. Don went on to read the biographies of Frederick Douglass, Malcolm X, Claude Brown, Nathan McCall, and many more. Don saw himself in these black men in America who faced obstacles, most often racism, and how they overcame these obstacles to contribute greatly to the American story. All of which was so inspiring to Don that when he entered publishing he knew he wanted to create books that were missing from his childhood library with subjects such as these inspiring men. 


And that's just the first bit! The rest of Don's session takes us deeper into how to find your next biography inspiration (including thinking of heroes in our news today, not just of the past), he shares tips on research (we all bow down to the amazing resource that is librarians!!), and ways for artists to develop their written voice (super cool tips from Don and how he uses 'mentor texts').




Saturday, August 3, 2024

Thank You for Joining Us for The SCBWI Summer 2024 Virtual Conference

 

Your Summer 2024 SCBWI Team Blog, clockwise from top left: Jaime Temairik, Don Tate, Jolie Stekly, Lee Wind, Justin Campbell, and Debbie Ridpath Ohi

On behalf of (alphabetical by first name order) Debbie Ridpath Ohi, Don Tate, Jaime Temairik, Jolie Stekly, Justin Campbell, and myself (Lee Wind),

Thank You!

Thank you for being part of this year's SCBWI Summer Conference—and yes, you are part of it even if you've just been checking out the posts here on the Official SCBWI Conference Blog!

We hope it's been informative and inspirational, and that you're fired up creatively to dive into your works in progress!

Save the date: The 2025 SCBWI In-Person Winter Conference will take place January 31-February 2, 2025. This Conference is an opportunity to meet IN PERSON with industry professionals and fellow children’s book creators! Traditionally held in New York City, this event features deep-dive creative labs, keynote addresses from kidlit icons, industry panels, one-on-one manuscript and portfolio consultations, and an in-person Portfolio Showcase. Registration will open in the fall of 2025. Hope to see you there!

Illustrate, Translate, and Write On,
Lee

Tuesday, July 16, 2024

We're Getting Excited! Have You Registered for #SCBWIsummer24 Yet?

 

the SCBWI Summer Virtual Conference 2024 logo, showing kids and pets and books!

Inspiring Keynotes!

Fascinating Panels!

Practical Craft and Business Breakout Sessions!

Helpful Peer Critiques!

Community-connecting Socials!

... And so much more! Check out the full conference schedule, and faculty, and offerings.

The online conference starts August 1, but you can still register!

Hope to see you online--* 

We have amazing team of bloggers (even if you're attending, you can't be everywhere at once, so keeping up with this conference blog, as well as team blog's social media posts (like on Bluesky) will offer you an even more expansive, informative and inspiring experience. 

Your SCBWI Team Blog for this Summer 2024 Virtual Conference is:

Debbie Ridpath Ohi

Don Tate

Jaime Temairik

Jolie Stekly

Justin Campbell

and me, Lee Wind

Each of the bloggers will be introducing themselves here before the conference, so stay tuned!**

Illustrate, Translate, and Write On,
Lee


*I would have put an exclamation point there, but seven, I think, should be the limit with a post this brief.
**Ack - that made eight.

Sunday, August 7, 2022

Thanks for joining us for #scbwiSummer22

On behalf of all of us on SCBWI Team Blog for the 2022 SCBWI Summer Conference, "Thank you!" for sharing the experience here on the official SCBWI Conference Blog! 

Our hope is this taste of the conference experience helps you on your creative journey, and that the business, inspiration, opportunity, craft, and community that SCBWI offers feels like it's yours -- because it is! SCBWI is here for you, and thank you for helping make this community so wonderful.

And remember, all the conference keynotes and breakout sessions are available as video recordings for those who registered through September 11, 2022 here.

The members of SCBWI Team Blog for the 2022 SCBWI Summer Conference, clockwise from top center: Debbie Ridpath Ohi, Jolie Stekly, Don Tate, Jasmine Paul, Jaime Temairik, and Lee Wind. Screen shot magic by Debbie Ridpath Ohi.

Keep up to date with all the conference bloggers who are also creators of children's, tween, and teen lit:

Debbie Ridpath Ohi

Don Tate

Jaime Temairik

Jasmine Paul

Jolie Stekly

Lee Wind


And stay tuned for information about the Winter 2023 conference which will be in person in New York City! Save the dates: February 11 and 12, 2023.

Illustrate, Translate, and Write On,
Lee

Sunday, February 13, 2022

Thanks For Joining Us For The 2022 SCBWI Winter Conference!

On behalf of Debbie Ridpath Ohi, Don Tate, Jaime Temairik, Jolie Stekly, and myself, Lee Wind, thank you for spending time with us as we experienced and blogged the 2022 SCBWI Winter Conference - #scbwiWinter22

a screenshot of SCBWI Team Blog, showing (clockwise from top left) Lee Wind, Debbie Ridpath Ohi, Jolie Stekly, Don Tate, and Jaime Temariki
Clockwise from top left: Lee Wind, Debbie Ridpath Ohi, Jolie Stekly, Don Tate, and Jaime Temairik


We hope you're inspired to do your creative thing, and are cheering you on as you illustrate, translate, and write works for kids and teens!

As Stephanie Garber said in her Saturday morning keynote, 
"Your dream is worth pursuing!"

Sunday, February 6, 2022

#scbwiWinter22 - The 2022 SCBWI Winter Conference - Starts This Week!

Socials start Tuesday February 8, 2022... (LGBTQIA2+, Peer Critiques, Spanish Language, Translators, GenNext)

The opening keynote from Brian Selznick is Friday Feb 11.

Saturday Feb 12 is a full day of keynotes (Stephanie Garber, Kelly Yang, Paula Yoo, and Vanessa Brantley-Newton) and panels (agents! editors! art directors!)

Sunday Feb 13 is your chance to get "Up Close with Publishing Professionals" - or attend the illustrator sessions, and then attend the conference wrap-up for the awards announcements!

It's going to be an amazing conference, and while it's all online, it will still be packed with inspiration, craft, business, opportunity, and community.

And as part of that community, we have a team of amazing bloggers who will be reporting live from the conference:

graphic logo for the 2022 SCBWI Winter Conference, and photos of Don Tate, Jolie Stekly, Jaime Temairik, Debbie Ridpath-Ohi, and Lee Wind, members of SCBWI Team Blog for this conference

Learn more about author and illustrator Debbie Ridpath Ohi

and author and illustrator Don Tate

and illustrator Jaime Temairik

and author Jolie Stekly

and me, author Lee Wind

We hope you enjoy the conference coverage here at the Official SCBWI Conference Blog! (http://scbwiconference.blogspot.com/)

Illustrate, Translate, and Write On,
Lee


Sunday, February 21, 2021

Thank You, and Save The Dates For The SCBWI Summer 2021 Conference: July 30, 31 and August 1 (New Dates as of March 15, 2021)

On behalf of all the team bloggers for this conference, Debbie Ohi, Lakita Wilson, Don Tate, Jolie Stekly, Jaime Temairik, and myself, Lee Wind, thanks for following along!

awesome graphic by Debbie Ohi - thanks, Debbie!


And save the dates for the SCBWI Summer 2021 conference. It's going to be virtual. And it's going to be an incredible celebration of 50 years of SCBWI!





Until then, stay safe, and Illustrate, Translate, and Write On!
Lee

Tuesday, August 4, 2020

Thank You, and Save The Dates For The Virtual New York Themed Mid-Winter Conference February 21-22, 2021

On behalf of myself, Jaime Temairik, Jolie Stekly, Don Tate, Leah Henderson, Mike Jung, Susie Ghahremani, Gaby Rodriguez, Olugbemisola Rhuday-Perkovich, and Winsome Bingham,

Thank you for joining us for this #SCBWISummerSpec journey!




Remember that the full recordings of the panels and keynote conversations (as well as the portfolio showcase and the conference bookstore!) will be available to everyone registered for the conference for the entire month of August.

And save the dates:
Virtual New York SCBWI Winter Conference
February 21-22, 2021
SCBWI's annual winter extravaganza will take place online in 2021. Faculty, program, and a full schedule will be available in late October 2020.

This beautiful image, and the creation animation above, are by Susie Ghahremani






Sunday, August 5, 2018

Thank you from all of us on SCBWI Team Blog - #LA18SCBWI Edition! (Save the Dates for #NY19SCBWI and #LA18SCBWI)



Thanks for joining us on this virtual adventure—a highlights reel of the inspiration, craft, business, opportunity, and community that make up the SCBWI Summer Conference.

From left to right, your #LA18SCBWI Team Bloggers:
Lee Wind, Jaime Temairik, Jolie Stekly, Martha Brockenbrough, Adria Quiñones, and Don Tate.

And we hope you'll save the dates for the upcoming:
SCBWI 20th Annual Winter Conference
New York City, Feb 8-10, 2019
Online conference registration posted in October at www.scbwi.org
and
SCBWI 48th Annual Summer Conference
Los Angeles, Aug 9-12, 2019
Online conference registration post in March at www.scbwi.org
Until then, keep writing and illustrating!

Thursday, August 2, 2018

Gearing up for #LA18SCBWI


It's here! Tomorrow's the start of the 2018 SCBWI Summer Conference here in Los Angeles, and here's how to both contribute and follow along on social media.

The official hashtag:

#LA18SCBWI

The easiest way to tap into the stream of inspiration, business tips, craft insights, opportunity, and community is to search with the hashtag on your favorite social media platform and find the people posting/tweeting/snapping about #LA18SCBWI... and then follow them, and join in the conversation yourself!


Your #LA18SCBWI Team Bloggers Are:



Martha Brockenbrough

Martha Brockenbrough is the author of several books for young readers, including Alexander Hamilton, Revolutionary (Feiwel & Friends); The Game of Love and Death; and Love, Santa (both Arthur A. Levine Books). She is a faculty member at Vermont College of Fine Arts Writing for Children & Young Adults program. Forthcoming titles include Unpresidented, a biography of Donald Trump, and Cheerful Chick, a picture book about a resilient bird with a big dream. http://martha-brockenbrough.squarespace.com/


**



Adria Quiñones

Adria Quiñones is a wildly successful technical writer who began writing novels for kids in order to have the experience of writing something that someone actually wanted to read. She is a member of Metro-NYC SCBWI's steering committee, hosts the chapter's Upper West Side write/sketch night, and helped found DIALOGS, the chapter's meet-up for kidlit creators from marginalized communities. Adria is a regular contributor to the Metro-NYC SCBWI‘s blog and was a winner of the SCBWI 2014 Midwinter Conference’s prestigious joke contest. In January 2015, Adria was named one of the winners of SCBWI’s Emerging Voices Award for her middle-grade novel, The Disappeared. She is currently at work on a picture book. http://adriaq.com/


**


Jolie Stekly

Jolie Stekly is a writer, instructor, and coach. She’s a long-time member of SCBWI and was recognized as SCBWI’s member of the year in 2009. She is a former regional advisor of the SCBWI Western Washington region. Her writing is represented by Rosemary Stimola at Stimola Literary Studio. www.joliestekly.com/


**
Don Tate

Don Tate is an award-winning author and the illustrator of numerous critically acclaimed books for children. He is also one of the founding hosts of the blog, The Brown Bookshelf – a blog designed to push awareness of the myriad of African American voices writing for young readers. Don’s books have won the Ezra Jack Keats Book Award, The Christopher Award, a Texas Institute of Letters Literary Award, a Writers’ League of Texas Book Award, and the SCBWI Crystal Kite Award. dontate.com


**
Jaime Temairik

Jaime Temairik is originally from Washington State and has recently moved to Philadelphia, PA, where she enjoys finding soft pretzels and colonial-era privy pits. Visit her online illustration portfolio at www.jaimetemairik.com to learn more about her books and work (but not her privy pits).


**


Lee Wind

Lee Wind, M.Ed., (and yes, the author of this blog post) is the official blogger for SCBWI (www.scbwi.blogspot.com) and is Captain of SCBWI’s Team Blog. His award-winning personal blog, I’m Here. I’m Queer. What The Hell Do I Read (www.leewind.org) has had over 2.5 million page loads and is a Children's Book Council "Great Diversity Blog." A writer of picture books through YA, his debut crowdfunded teen novel, "Queer as a Five-Dollar Bill," publishes October 2, 2018.

**



Here's to an amazing #LA18SCBWI ahead!

Sunday, February 12, 2017

Thank you!

Thank you for sharing these moments of the 2017 SCBWI Winter Conference with us!


Left to Right, your SCBWI Team Blog: Jolie Stekly, Martha Brockenbrough, Lee Wind, Jaime Temairik, and Don Tate


We hope you'll join us for the 2017 SCBWI Summer Conference in Los Angeles, July 7-10, 2017!

Illustrate and Write On!

Sunday, July 31, 2016

Thank You, and We'll See You in New York February 10-12, 2017

hard at work


From all of us on SCBWI Team Blog, thanks for joining us for the 2016 SCBWI Summer Conference.

We hope to see you in New York City, February 10-12, 2017, for #NY17SCBWI. The 2017 SCBWI Winter Conference will include full-day intensives for both writers & illustrators, a juried portfolio showcase with a grand prize, workshops, keynotes, the opportunity to network with top editors, art directors, agents and publishers, and so much more!




From left to right, your SCBWI Team Blog: Don Tate, Jolie Stekly, Martha Brockenbrough, Jaime Temairik, and Lee Wind

Thanks to Kim Turrisi and Linda Sue Park for the pictures!

Saturday, July 30, 2016

Ingredients of a Successful Picture Book: Jessixa Bagley and Don Tate



Jessixa Bagley and Don Tate took part in our panel on picture books. Jessixa is the Golden Kite winner for picture book texts, and Don has won numerous awards for his critically acclaimed texts and illustrations.

What makes a picture book successful? 

There's a sense of completion to it, Jessixa said. It doesn't assume that the reader has knowledge about the subject. There's nothing left hanging. It's like an amuse bouche, a perfect bite. She's also drawn to books with a really deep meaning—a meaning that can be joyful too.

Don loves it when people can flip through his book and know the story by the pictures. He loves making emotional connection with readers. We connect with our readers through emotions. Page turns help guide readers from left to right through the story. "I like it when the illustrator has really done their job ... and you want to linger and live in that space for a while."

When it comes to developing stories for markets 
Don doesn't illustrate books differently on whether they're commercial or more for libraries. Don loves to illustrate books about little-known historical figures, which typically puts his books into the school/library market. This lets him do more school visits.

Jessixa also doesn't think about making books directly for markets, and thinks that books with emotional content can be really useful in school markets.

What collaborations help? 
Don is in several critique groups. They help him make his manuscripts stronger for agents.

Jessixa says you should treat your work like a baby egg. Nurture it until it gets a little more solid, and then you can share it. You won't be as hurt by the feedback. It won't be as bruising. It will be able to hatch. "We've all had the experience where you work on something really hard and you show it to someone and they don't respond to it, and you're gutted."

Advice: 
Don: Be sure to keep your stories child-focused. It's important to engage a child by beginning in childhood. Children like to see themselves represented on the first page of a book. He's not a fan of labeling books by gender. Sometimes, books appeal more to boy than to girls. But you don't need to labels. "Let the readers find them where they will."

Jessixa wasn't a girly girl. She wasn't a tomboy. She was just herself, so she gravitated toward identity-neutral things. There is universality to her work that she wants to extend. "I have a hard time with the fact that there are pink LEGOs and those are the girl LEGOs."

"Allowing the space to have things appeal to more people, whether it's gender or diversity, is going to make us all a lot stronger."




Ingredients of a Successful Picture Book: Jessixa Bagley and Don Tate



Jessixa Bagley and Don Tate took part in our panel on picture books. Jessixa is the Golden Kite winner for picture book texts, and Don has won numerous awards for his critically acclaimed texts and illustrations.

What makes a picture book successful? 

There's a sense of completion to it, Jessixa said. It doesn't assume that the reader has knowledge about the subject. There's nothing left hanging. It's like an amuse bouche, a perfect bite. She's also drawn to books with a really deep meaning—a meaning that can be joyful too.

Don loves it when people can flip through his book and know the story by the pictures. He loves making emotional connection with readers. We connect with our readers through emotions. Page turns help guide readers from left to right through the story. "I like it when the illustrator has really done their job ... and you want to linger and live in that space for a while."

When it comes to developing stories for markets 
Don doesn't illustrate books differently on whether they're commercial or more for libraries. Don loves to illustrate books about little-known historical figures, which typically puts his books into the school/library market. This lets him do more school visits.

Jessixa also doesn't think about making books directly for markets, and thinks that books with emotional content can be really useful in school markets.

What collaborations help? 
Don is in several critique groups. They help him make his manuscripts stronger for agents.

Jessixa says you should treat your work like a baby egg. Nurture it until it gets a little more solid, and then you can share it. You won't be as hurt by the feedback. It won't be as bruising. It will be able to hatch. "We've all had the experience where you work on something really hard and you show it to someone and they don't respond to it, and you're gutted."

Advice: 
Don: Be sure to keep your stories child-focused. It's important to engage a child by beginning in childhood. Children like to see themselves represented on the first page of a book. He's not a fan of labeling books by gender. Sometimes, books appeal more to boy than to girls. But you don't need to labels. "Let the readers find them where they will."

Jessixa wasn't a girly girl. She wasn't a tomboy. She was just herself, so she gravitated toward identity-neutral things. There is universality to her work that she wants to extend. "I have a hard time with the fact that there are pink LEGOs and those are the girl LEGOs."

"Allowing the space to have things appeal to more people, whether it's gender or diversity, is going to make us all a lot stronger."




The Picture Book Panel Begins!


Moderated by Laurent Linn (standing), the panelists, left to right, are: author/illustrator Jessixa Bagley, illustrator John Parra, editor Susan Rich, author/illustrator Barney Saltzberg, and author/illustrator Don Tate.

Friday, July 29, 2016

Books For and About Diverse Kids: John Parra, Don Tate, Lisa Yee, Stacey Barney, and Pat Cummings

Right to Left: Pat Cummings, Stacey Barney, John Parra, Don Tate, and Lisa Yee

In this discussion-based breakout session, we have multiple perspectives from different parts of the children's literature community:

Pat Cummings, author/illustrator of over thirty-five books for young readers (and Board member of SCBWI, the Authors Guild, and the Eric Carle Museum of Picture Book Art, among others.)

Stacey Barney, Senior Editor at Penguin/Putnam Books for Young Readers

John Parra, Golden-Kite winning illustrator.

Don Tate, author and illustrator, winner of the Ezra Jack Keats Award.

Lisa Yee, author of 16 books and winner of the very first Sid Fleischman Humor Award.


Some highlights:

Stacey Barney:
"Write organic stories." Sometimes she finds that it's almost as if writers are checking off boxes for diversity with their diverse cast of characters, but "character shouldn't feel like categories."

John Parra:
"Be respectful. Show it to others who are part of those communities. Make sure authentic is how it's portrayed."

Don Tate:
"Study. Research. Vet. ...Make sure you're not exploiting the topic."

Lisa Yee:
You can write outside your experience "but you have to get it right."

The panel are telling us fascinating stories, like Lisa sharing how her Millicent Min (in 2003) was the first middle grade book with a photo of an Asian American kid on the cover.

Don shares about doing a school visit when he was asked by a 5th grade class if he only illustrates Black people, and how he asked the two African American boys in the class if they felt like they've read books that represented them - and they said no. So he turned to the rest of the class and explained that he's made it his mission, he's built his whole career, to create positive portrayals of people that look like those two boys… and the whole class clapped.

Stacey tells us about teaching (elementary and preschool and high school), and reading picture books to the kids, and how she made an effort to choose picture books that reflected their experience. "Kids are kids."

Pat speaks of her school visits, and how kids pick up books out of curiosity. She shares how she was asked once by a British author why she only does books with Black characters. Pat countered, asking the British author why they only created books with British characters…

John speaks of how he sees diverse books being published, but the awards and reviews and the best lists of the year aren't that diverse. After they've published, how do they get recognized and supported?

They cover editorial staffing (and the importance of diversity in staffing across departments, including marketing, publicity and sales), being vetted by additional experts, and much, much more.




Sunday, February 14, 2016

Thank You, and We'll See You In Los Angeles!

SCBWI Team Blog, left to right: Lee Wind, Jaime Temairik, Jolie Stekly, Don Tate, and Martha Brockenbrough

What a conference!

We hope you'll join us for all the inspiration, craft, business, opportunity and community of the 45th Annual SCBWI Summer Conference in Los Angeles, July 29 - August 1, 2016.

SCBWI Team Blog
Lee, Jaime, Jolie, Martha and Don

Saturday, February 13, 2016

Welcome, from SCBWI Team Blog

We're so glad you're here -- in person and/or following along on this blog.

SCBWI Team Blog, from Left to Right: Jolie Stekly, Martha Brockenbrough (standing), Lee Wind, Don Tate and Jaime Temairik


Welcome to #NY16SCBWI, the 17th Annual SCBWI Winter Conference!


Wednesday, February 10, 2016

Team Blog's Don Tate Interviews Caldecott-Winning Illustrator (And Author!) Sophie Blackall

This interview Don did with Sophie Blackall is SO good. 



They cover juggling projects, writing, and Sophie gives us a glimpse into what she'll be talking about at the conference: how to make a living doing what you love.

Illustrate and Write On!
Lee