Saturday, February 1, 2025
Creative Lab: Creating Characters Your Readers Love with Erin Entrada Kelly
Creative Lab: Tiff Liao on Worldbuilding
The official title of this creative lab: I Can Show You the World: Making Your Worldbuilding Come Alive with Editor Tiff Liao.
Tiff's bio: Tiff Liao is Executive Editor at Random House Books for Young Readers. She's had the honor and joy of editing award-winning and bestselling authors including Tomi Adeyemi, Angeline Boulley, Dhonielle Clayton, Maurene Goo, Goldy Moldavsky, Tochi Onyebuchi, Margaret Owen, Jenn Reese, and "Queer Eye" star Karamo Brown. Previously, she was at Zando, where she launched the young readers program, and at Macmillan. Born and raised in California, she now lives in Nyack, NY, with her husband and puppy-cat. She's newly on Bluesky: @tiffliao.bsky.social
Tiff Liao |
Tiff starts with this wisdom:
"All stories require world-building, even if they're set in our real world."
It's not just setting, Tiff explains. World building includes:
Macro level - politics, history
Micro level - food, details that bring a place/society to life
Tone - epic and brutal or cozy and sweet?
Whatever it is, we want it to feel real.
To start us off, Tiff asks for folks to share worlds we love from books we've read...
Your job: "make us homesick for a place we've never been."
World is shaped by our perspective. So we view and experience the same thing in different ways. The same is true of your characters. Their perspectives shape the world of your story.
The character has to interact with the world - world building serves the story, and supports the story you want to tell.
Start with a want. What drives story? Main character's motivation. This is a key world-building tool.
Three questions to explore:
1. What does your protagonist want?
2. How does your world present a conflict?
3. How does your world challenge your character to solve it?
Tiff walks us through the answers to these three questions from some mentor texts, including The Hunger Games by Suzanne Collins and To All The Boys I've Loved Before by Jenny Han.
And then we get hands-on, applying these questions to our own works-in-progress.
There's lots more... this creative lab is off to a great start!
Opening Keynote: Erin Entrada Kelly
Fresh off her second (!!) Newbery Medal win for her middle grade novel The First State of Being, Erin Entrada Kelly opens her keynote with remembering how she's been coming to SCBWI conferences since before she was published, as an aspiring author illustrator "desperate" to find an agent. And now she's delivering the opening keynoting to this conference - a "full circle" moment!
Erin Entrada Kelly |
Erin shares about her recent harrowing, emotional experience of being diagnosed and going through treatment for cancer. She speaks of the support she received, and reflects on how
"sometimes we have to show ourselves grace, sometimes we have to change the narratives we tell ourselves about ourselves"
Erin opens up, telling us her reaction to the word 'brave' that people applied to her. "Did I feel brave? No, I felt like a woman enduring."
What it means to be brave is the through-line of her talk.
She tells us about her upcoming nonfiction book, At Last She Stood.
And how she was editing that book during her treatment. It's about Joey Guerrero, a Filipino woman, diagnosed with leprosy, who worked as a spy for the allies during WWII. She delivered a map (taped to her back) by walking 40-60 miles through the jungle to enabld the Filipine and US armed forces to liberate an internment camp in Manila and free the prisoners there. How did she get past the checkpoints? She showed her leprosy scars and the soldiers were too afraid to search her. She even went with the soliders to free the prisoners!
Maybe bravery comes in different shapes and sizes, Erin reflects, and that's "extra-large." That's what she thinks of when she thinks of bravery.
Erin tells us stories being in high school where she wasn't brave. When she didn't risk trying out for debate, when she didn't stand up for a kid being teased, when she went along when a friend was ousted from their group.
"I think about these things, these things I can't forget. I give myself forgiveness, now as an adult... I often think about the ways I let myself down as a kid... and I believe it's one of the reasons I write for young people... because we're trying to heal a part of ourselves when we were young"
She talks about the bravery in this room:
we're all here with the hope to tell stories to young people - not without fear, but despite fear.
"There are many, many ways you can fail... you can be rejected... but if you're here, that means you have faith in yourself. You're betting on yourself."
And even if you're already published, "you're here because you're not finished. "
Erin tells us that "tomorrow, I'm going to an illustration workshop, because I have a dream that one day I'll be able to illustrate my own picture book."
She acknowledges that "the world is on fire, literally and figuratively... and yet, here we are together, all dreaming."
"It's important for us to protect our sacred creative spaces."
"We have a privilege of being here."
"We are here to create and be inspired."
"We want to connect with young readers, make them feel seen, feel safe."
"If your book has made child laugh, you have accomplished something."
Erin tells us that researchers at Cornell looked into people's biggest regrets at the end of their lives. 76% said that their single biggest regret in life was not following their dreams.
Another study looked at what people regretted most: trying and failing or not trying at all? The vast majority said they regretted not trying at all.
And here we all are, following our dreams.
all of us together...
And Erin tells us, "that's brave."
The First State of Being by Erin Entrada Kelly, winner of the 2025 Newbery Medal |
Erin ends her keynote with a wish for us - that we remember that by being here, we are betting on ourselves, and that is deeply meaningful.
And an appreciative audience gives Erin a standing ovation!
Welcome Sarah Baker, SCBWI Executive Director
- Don’t hide!
- Be yourself then you find your people!
- Take a lot of notes!
- Take breaks and give yourself space to absorb everything you’re learning.
- Go outside and eat some fresh air
- Form connections. Your expanded network
- Stay hydrated
About
Sarah Baker (she/her) is the Executive Director of SCBWI, where she leads the SCBWI staff and works closely with the Board of Directors, the Advisory Council, and the official SCBWI volunteers. She joined the SCBWI staff in 2011. Sarah graduated from UCSB with a major in Studio Art and began her career in children’s book publishing at Penguin Young Readers Group, where she designed children’s books. Sarah is also a children’s book illustrator, with her debut illustrated picture book coming out in 2026: Becca and Bubbe's Bucket List, written by Laura Gehl, published by Rocky Pond Books.
And the SCBWI Winter 2025 In-Person Conference is getting started!
As the saying goes, let's get this party started!
from left to right, your SCBWI Team bloggers for the SCBWI Winter 2025 In-Person Conference: Lee Wind, Jolie Stekly, and Justin Campbell. |
Jolie, Justin and I are delighted to be your hosts for this SCBWI Team Blog adventure... thanks for coming along, and here's to a great conference ahead!