Sunday, January 18, 2026
Thank You, from US to YOU!
The Wrap Up
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 Global Regional Teams. 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 May 2026: Becca & Bubbe's Bucket List, written by Laura Gehl, published by Rocky Pond Books.
With the audience still applauding Tiffany Jackson for her inspiring closing keynote, Sarah took to the stage to thank Tiffany both for her keynote and for her generosity in giving a Q&A.
She hopes that everyone found inspiration, tools, insights, and friends this weekend. “The whole staff are proud of you too.”
She goes on, as we leave the children’s book bubble, remember that this community is here for you and you can tap into that magic anytime you want and anytime you need it.
- Attend a meet up
- Attend an online course
- Listen to a podcast episode
- You can read a blog post (Shoutout to us!)
Stay in touch with those you met this weekend. Community is what keeps us going. From the good times and the bad.
Sarah talked about an author talk she heard. The author said that writing and reading is a way to underscore that human connection is important . You know my mind and I know yours. Sarah agrees.
Human connection is more and more rare. We have to fight against that. The books we create connect all of us. When you go back to your desks, just know that you’re doing important work. When it feels hard and silly and vulnerable, remember that it’s important. The world needs your stories, so keep it going.
It’s great to stay connected, so use the SCBWI hashtag, #scbwiNY26, when sharing content from this weekend.
Even if you didn’t attend the class, you can still glean some gem or insight from someone else’s posting of the class.
She reminds us that the Virtual Winter Conference is coming up! It starts with golden kite awards and you can keep the energy of this weekend going with all new content.
Stay in touch throughout the year. The next winter conference will be at this same hotel, the Marriott Marquis in Time Square, in March of 2027.
Thanks for coming and for being members.
Keep creating!
Can't make it to the In-Person Winter Conference in New York City, join us online at the Virtual Winter Conference featuring inspirational talks, industry panels and deep-dive Creative Labs, taking place in February of 2026. Videos of all sessions are available to watch for approximately 30 days after the event.
Closing Keynote: Tiffany D Jackson
Tiffany D. Jackson is the author of ALLEGEDLY (HarperCollins/Katherine Tegen Books).
TV professional by day, novelist by night, awkward black girl 24/7. She received her Bachelor of Arts in Film from Howard University and her Master of Arts in Media Studies from The New School University. A Brooklyn native, she is a lover of naps, cookie dough, and beaches, currently residing in the borough she loves with her adorable chihuahua Oscar, most likely multitasking.
Some Thoughts with Tiffany D Jackson
In ways, Tiffany feels like she tripped and fell into this career. But she wanted to be an author since she was four years old. She said she wanted to make books because she didn't know the word author. When she shared this with people as she got older, people discouraged her. This lead her into the direction of film, but even through school, she didn't forget that four-year old-dream. She kept tinkering with her writing.
When Tiffany entered the job force after college, she was still writing. And in 2012 a news story about a teen convicted of murdering a baby sparked her attention, and she started writing. After receiving many rejections in the adult world of commercial fiction, Tiffany was ready to hang it up, feeling all the rejection was too much.
That's when a friend told her words that would change her life: "It sounds like you wrote a young adult novel."
This opened the world of young adult books to Tiffany that she din't know. She hired a development editor, and she create a list of 100 of agents. Out it went, and the rest of history. That book became her debut Allegedly, and Tiffany has been writing full time ever since.
Tiffany tells us all to be obedient to the call and dream because it will never leave you alone.
1. Find a lane and stick to it for a minimum of 2 books
2. Before you start writing, nail your elevator pitch
3. Keep writing, your next book will sell your last book
Tiffany's book Monday's Not Coming is one of the 50 most banned books in America. But she shares she would walk through fire to save one more black child. Banning is just closing the pages the books that kids need.
"Don't we want to arm our kids with knowledge that we were not afforded?"
Tiffany still has hope for us. So here are four things to keep the hope alive:
1. Write books for kids not adults who lack reading comprehension.
2. Do not let the chance of being banned keep you from creating your next masterpiece.
3. "Look for the helpers. You will always find people who are helping." -Mr. Rogers
"Your decision to write for children is an honorable one...The books that you write will save lives, so you must write them..You are unshakeable if you are a children's book author."
A standing ovation for powerful words!
Outstanding International Books
Junko Sakoi announces the Outstanding International Book Titles for 2026
The covers of the 41 outstanding titles
Map representing the titles.
Below are the recognized titles by theme. Please visit USSY website for a list of these books.
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Outstanding International Books Panel: Wendy Stephens
Wendy Stephens is the immediate past president of the United States Board on Books for Young People (USBBY)
Ms. Sarah Baker opened up by acknowledging the global kidlit/SCBWI group. She was thrilled when USBBY reached out about their list. OIB highlights outstanding kid lit books from the last year. Six SCBWI members are on the list(some in attendance today). Here to present the list are Wendy Stephens and Junko Sakoi.
Wendy started by expressing excitement at the opportunity for face-to-face contact. She’s the immediate past president of USBBY and she’s very happy to be here today.
She started with a history about Bella Lepton. Lepton left Germany during WWII for her safety. She returned after the war with the focus on rebuilding Germany. She wanted to help by building up future generations to avoid similar conflict. She thought this would be through sharing children’s literature. She established libraries and worked with international authors and illustrators to found boards.
Wendy shared the mission of iBbY and also some of the international projects.
She recommended the website, as it contains not only the notable international books from 2026, but also a backlog of winners from the past 20 years.
More information about USBBY can be found here:
Wendy then gave the floor to Junko Sakoi to announce the winners.
Can't make it to the In-Person Winter Conference in New York City, join us online at the Virtual Winter Conference featuring inspirational talks, industry panels and deep-dive Creative Labs, taking place in February of 2026. Videos of all sessions are available to watch for approximately 30 days after the event.
Fractured Folktales: Reimagining African Folktales in Contemporary Picture Books with Ugo Anidi
After the story, she asked—
How to Make the Unconscious Conscious: Forget About Your Genius and Say What You Mean with AS King
A.S. King has been called "one of the best YA writers today" by the New York Times Book Review. She is the author of more than 15 novels for young people and has won the LA Times Book Prize, the Michael L. Printz Award; and the Margaret A. Edwards Award, and the ALAN Award for lifetime achievement in the field of young adult literature. King is the co-founder of the USF MFAY program and is the founder of Gracie's House, a nonprofit that provides safe spaces for LGBTQ+ youth in rural areas. She spends many months of the year traveling the world speaking to high school and university students, educators, and humans who care about literacy, equality, and the mental health of young people. She lives in Pennsylvania with her son and her loud cat.
for the room: Write a letter to the person who hurt us the most.
Nonfiction Glow Up: Crafting Picture Books that Captivate Today’s Readers with Kate Messner
New York Times bestselling author Kate Messner is passionately curious and has written more than seventy books for kids who wonder, too. Her award-winning titles include picture books like Over and Under the Snow, Over and Under the Waves, and The Scariest Kitten in the World; novels like Breakout, Chirp, and The Trouble with Heroes; engaging nonfiction like the History Smashers series; the Ranger in Time historical adventures; and the Fergus and Zeke easy readers. A former TV news reporter, Kate also spent fifteen years teaching middle school English. These days, she splits her time between Lake Champlain and Florida's Gulf Coast. Learn more at www.katemessner.com
Kate Messner has been talking with agents and editors and one thing's for certain: it’s tough time to sell nonfiction.
Nonfiction is facing a lot of challenges: over-acquiring over the past few years and book-banning in large-market states like Texas and Florida.
So, what’s in demand?
-strong narratives: voice and poetic language that will be a great read-aloud
-structures that increase readers’ delight: experimentation with structure
-photographic nonfiction
-accessible science, including math & physics
-everyday things: ie the airport book, color, food etc
-Humor* every single editor asked for funny nonfiction
-great storytelling: suspense, creating tension
-interactivity
-underrepresented voices
What have editors seen enough of?
-picture book biographies(there’s a backlog)
-less history (more STEAM)
-didactic stories
-books written like articles (facts aren’t enough)
-detailed art notes (keep notes and references to provide later on, instead)
According to Librarians, what’s circulating?
-animals
-sports
-hunting and fishing
-farming
-crisp, stunning photography
-STEM - space, Dinos gaming robots
-cooking and food
-origami and drawing
Kate's activities for the group are called Glow Up Times. I'll be listing them here so you can do it at home.
Glow up time - Create a list of ideas for potential books and, given the lists above, which ideas sparkle and which ideas need reimagining?
Consider that what’s working now is different from 15 years ago.
Use the Libby app:
Download and look at current picture books. If you live in NY state, you can have your NY public library card, Queens NY library card, and Buffalo. All can be accessed through Libby. What's it like in your state?
Advice: get as many library cards as you can on libby and read/look at all new non-fiction books.
Strong narratives can be many things. Sometimes it’s suspense, sometimes it's immersion into a world, sometimes it's poetry, it's gorgeous language. Ask yourself, is poetry the way in? If so, play up the poetry. Let it be poetic. It can also be humor.
You have a topic and you have to ask yourself, what can I do with this? Can I make it funny? Immersive? Interactive? You’re adding reasons for people to pick it up.
Glow Up Activity:
Make it more (poetic, humorous, interactive)
Think about the strengths of your work. then think, what else might it be to make it more engaging?
The goal is to level it up. If it’s funny, make it more funny/silly.
The group then took an active manuscript and tried to make it more.
Structures that delight readers:
Scrapbooking like the book, My Antarctica
A tour through a museum like the book, Meet the Mini Mammals
Imagine sharing this book in a big group of kids. What would they shout out back at you?
Glow Up Activity:
Take a picture book project you love and think about structuring it a different way. Play around, mess around. It’s what lets you be weird
Could it be a contest? Could it be a tour? Could it have suspense?
Frequent happy failure. If you’re messing around with a lot of ideas, you’re going to find more that stick. Think about them like wildflower seeds. You shouldn’t care a lot for 3 seeds. You should scatter around a lot. Some will sprout and you can move in that direction.
Ask, what bigger subject can you connect it to?
The Brilliant Deep disguises a biography within a larger issue.
The Story of the Saxophone sells better than the the tory of the person who invented the saxophone.
When a project isn’t working...
-Make it MORE. Give yourself notes
-expand the topic
-try a new structure
-experiment with point of view
-ask yourself should it be a middle grade book?
Write something new, keep a writers notebook for ideas. Scribble ideas down.
An idea a day may lead to 100 scribbles in your notebook, which turns to 30 that have legs, which turn to 20 that don’t have obvious issues, which turn to 8 that may quite work, that are then 2 after the agents look through it and apply their vision. So keep going.
Keep working on 'em, and play.
Kate provided some additional materials here: www.katemessner.com/scbwi26
Can't make it to the In-Person Winter Conference in New York City, join us online at the Virtual Winter Conference featuring inspirational talks, industry panels and deep-dive Creative Labs, taking place in February of 2026. Videos of all sessions are available to watch for approximately 30 days after the event.

