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A Writer’s Thanksgiving

I love the Thanksgiving season! It reminds me that I have so much to be thankful for. And it turns out, being grateful has its benefits.
In addition to promoting a positive attitude, research has shown that practicing gratitude for 15 minutes a day, five days a week (for at least 6 weeks) can positively affect your physical and mental health.
Expressing gratitude can also improve your sleep, mood, and immunity.
Writers often experience a boatload of rejection – query rejection, manuscript submission rejection, revision rejection. These experiences can easily produce a negative attitude toward writing, and life in general.
Writers have so much to be thankful for! For example,
  • books,
  • the ability to create,
  • critique partners,
  • honest feedback that leads to improvement,
  • time for revision,
  • quiet walks that spark ideas, and
  • frequent celebrations (nothing is too small. Ex. completing a paragraph or scene or meeting a daily word count goal).
We’d love to hear what you’re thankful for. Please leave a comment below, and let’s start practicing gratitude today!
Have a have a Grateful Thanksgiving!
Resources:

Interview with Suma Subramaniam, Author of V. MALAR – GREATEST HOST OF ALL TIME

I had the pleasure of picking the brain of Suma Subramaniam, a seasoned author (and long time member of the Mixed-Up Files team), to discuss the release of her latest chapter book: V. MALAR – GREATEST HOST OF ALL TIME! Suma took time from her busy schedule to indulge my curiosity and wow me with her wisdom.

I’m honored to be part of her new book release tour with this inspiring and heartfelt interview. So, let’s jump on in!

A Determined Journey

Patchree: What has your publishing journey been like? Did you always plan to become a children’s author?

nov 2024 new releases

Suma: I always wanted to be an author for a long time. But children’s writing happened when I attended my first SCBWI conference in Western Washington in 2010. I met the wonderful author, Sundee Frazier at the conference. Sundee encouraged me to keep working on a manuscript that she read the first five pages of. I followed her advice and kept the dream alive. Five years later, I got accepted to the MFA program in Writing for Children and Young Adults at the Vermont College of Fine Arts. Fast-forward to 2019, my short story was published in THE HERO NEXT DOOR (Crown Books, 2019). And now, I’m here with V. MALAR – GREATEST HOST OF ALL TIME (Candlewick Press, 2024), illustrated by Archana Sreenivasan, with several published picture books and a few more books releasing in the next few years.

Patchree: You have quite a book resume to your name, and your work truly highlights your Indian heritage. How do you think your cultural roots impact your writing?

Suma: Thank you, Patchree! Having spent more than two decades in India, I have fond memories of my growing up years. There’s still so much I do not know.  I have deep interest in history. Every book takes me along a fascinating journey during the research process. That’s why I write uplifting, lively stories about fun and feisty children of Indian descent that my little self would’ve wanted to read.

Patchree: What motivates you to write?

Arms hugging globe with a red heart on top.

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Suma: I always ask myself what my effort in writing books will amount to. Like any writer, I expect my work to influence or make an impact on many readers, and sometimes I am discouraged by the world’s indifference to children’s and young adult writing. But I hold on to the dreams I’ve had since I was a child by staying committed to the craft and the community. They sustain me through the difficult times, the struggles and disappointments that come with this profession.

Patchree: As an author, what is your wish or key takeaway for readers of your books?

Suma: I hope readers love themselves. If we can’t love ourselves, we can’t love the world. That is the key takeaway for readers from all my books.

 

Writing Your Roots

Patchree: Moving onto your latest book, V. MALAR: GREATEST HOST OF ALL TIME, who was your inspiration for your main character Malar?

Suma: The inspiration for V. MALAR: GREATEST HOST OF ALL TIME came from celebrating the harvest festival year-after-year since my childhood. Growing up in India, holidays and festivals brought me closer to my family. These celebrations not only passed on from generation to generation, but they also helped us navigate life’s joys and challenges with ease. In troubled times, we learned to recover together. Pongal is a four-day celebration in South India when crops are harvested in mid-January. It is celebrated every year in many Indian households during the Tamil month called Thai, in honor of the work farmers do. V. MALAR- GREATEST HOST OF ALL TIME is filled with moments of togetherness, joy, and empathy that begin in the family. I hope that through Malar’s eyes, all readers will access the experience of those relationships, take them to heart, and pass it on with love.

Patchree: How much of your own experiences did you include, if any, in this story?Indian Pongal Festival

Suma: Holidays and festivals are the times to gather with our families and friends, and strengthen our relationships. There is so much love underneath the traditions, celebrations, and growing up in an Indian household.

I included everything I loved about the harvest festival and the traditions of celebrating from my own family. Pongal brings families together to celebrate the blessings of good health and happiness. The first day of Pongal is called Bhogi Pongal. On this day, we clean our homes and discard old and broken items. The second day is called Thai Pongal. It is also called “Uzhavar Thirunal” which means “Farmers’ Day”. We worship the sun god and have an elaborate meal. The word “Pongal” means “to boil” in Tamil. It is also the name of the rice dish that is prepared on the second day of the festival. We make two types of pongal, sweet and savory. It is served with stew made with the season’s vegetables.

The third day is called Maatu Pongal. We honor our cattle and seek blessings for a good harvesting season. The fourth day is called Kaanum Pongal. It is also known as “Thiruvalluvar Dhinam” because we celebrate the eminent Tamil poet, Thiruvalluvar on this day.

Patchree: Your book does a wonderful job of touching on the idea of “culture shock” children of the diaspora experience when visiting their native lands. How important was this theme for you?

Suma: Thank you! As I wrote about Malar, it was important to have her believe in the strength of her extended family even though she and her cousins lived in different countries. The relationship snapshots in the story show that the expectations of both parenting and being raised as a child can feel like you’re being pulled in different directions sometimes. These are the universal experiences faced by families all over the world.  Malar’s book is more than just a story about holiday festivities. It’s a story about diaspora when cousins from opposite hemispheres meet, relishing family time, practicing gratitude, recognizing the value of what one has, being present, and even living a sustainable lifestyle while combatting climate change. There are some valuable SEL and STEM lessons to be learned here about seeing things from another person’s perspective and how ordinary people in different parts of the world choose to live responsibly.

Patchree: It’s clear that V. Malar is a planned chapter book series, what can readers look forward to with this series?

Suma: Readers can look forward to more hilarious adventures with Malar. In book-2, Malar is all set to become the greatest ranger of all time in South India’s Western Ghats where she will explore what it takes to become a nature conservationist and a wildlife advocate.

In book-3, Malar’s first visit to the US to see her cousins coincides with Diwali and Halloween. She prepares to become the greatest hallowali of all time.

Woman holding a notebook and writing while standing alone in front of a window

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From An Author’s POV

Patchree: What do you do if, or when, you get into a writing slump? How do you pull yourself out from a stint of writer’s block?

Suma: I travel every few months to take my mind away from writing. If I’m not traveling, I do things that fill my well in other ways. I read, knit, volunteer, go for long walks, and tire my legs out. Other than that, I visit my local indie bookstore, the library, cook, and host dinner with friends and family.

Patchree: Last but not least, what is your number one piece of advice for aspiring writers or perhaps something you’ve learned that you wish you knew before becoming a published author?

Suma: Writing is a lonely creative pursuit and also a business.  With the connections you build in the industry, you can go a long way, not only to improve your creative work, but also find your way through it. Agents and editors like working with writers who are invested in making books for children in the long term. Having a portfolio of projects gives the industry an added layer of reinforcement that your work is good, and that you are putting the effort to make the writing better with every project.

 

More about Suma:

Author PhotoSuma Subramaniam is the author of several children’s books based on STEM and STEAM topics as well as India and Indian heritage. She earned her MFA in writing from Vermont College of Fine Arts. Her poems have been published in the Young People’s Poetry edition of Poetry Magazine from Poetry Foundation. When she’s not writing, she’s volunteering and blogging about children’s books. Suma lives in Washington State with her husband and a dog who will do anything for Indian sweets and snacks. Find her online at sumasubramaniam.com.

 

 

 

 

 

STEM Tuesday — Human Body– Author Interview

I’m delighted to welcome Rachel Poliquin to the STEM Tuesday blog today. She has written a fabulous book about the body, but there’s a really cool twist. You’ll see…

Rachel Poliquin author

The Museum of Odd Body Leftovers book

“Kids and adult alike will love poring over the different sections of this book and will delight in informing their friends and family members of the facts they’ve learned.”—School Library Journal 

A perfect book for engaging kids in STEM: This illustrated tour of our “leftover” body parts (like the appendix, or even goosebumps) introduces readers age 7-11 to the bizarre and fascinating science of evolution.

Welcome to the weirdest museum you’ll ever explore—the one inside your body.

Did you know your amazing, incredible body is a walking, talking museum of evolution? In The Museum of Odd Body Leftovers, tour guides Wisdom Tooth and Disappearing Kidney lead readers through a wacky museum dedicated to vestigial structures: body parts that were essential to our ancestors but are no longer useful to us—even though they’re still hanging around.

Engaging, hilarious, and a visual treat, The Museum of Odd Body Leftovers is a place you’ll want to visit again and again.

 

Welcome to STEM Tuesday, Rachel. We are delighted to chat with you! 

JS: How did you get the idea to write this awesome book?

RQ: An editor at Greystone actually pitched me the idea. Vestigial organs for kids? It sounded perfectly quirky, and of course I said yes.

JS: Did you have fun researching this?  

RQ: When I began writing the book, I knew nothing about evolution beyond the basics. I had no idea where to begin! But there is nothing I like more than knowing absolutely nothing about a subject. Once I decided to write the book as a museum of human evolution, I had to do a very deep dive to figure out which creatures were the first or last to have a particular trait so they could be part of the exhibits. I became a little obsessed with an evolution podcast called Common Descent. I’d listen to it for hours while I walked around my neighbourhood.

But this book will always have a special place in my heart.  I was finishing writing in March and April of 2020, just at the beginning of Covid when the world had shut up tight and no one knew what was happening.  I was reaching out to academics and researchers around the world—Belgium, New York, Japan, Mexico—to help me understand the science, and of course we talked about the situation in their countries and how they were coping. It helped me feel very connected in a time of isolation.

 

JS: What is your favorite “Odd Body Part”?

RQ: That a hard one!  I’m not sure.  Of course I love Disappearing Kidney, but I also really love all the theories about why humans lost their fur. Fur isn’t preserved in the same way bones are, so no one really knows. I also LOVE LOVE LOVE how Clayton illustrated the Survivor Hair theories as movie posters. These still crack me up everything time.

JS: What would you like readers to get out of this book?

RQ: Obviously, I’d love them to have a better understand of evolution and how all living creatures are connected. But I also tried to highlight that science and our understanding of the world is not all set and done. Scientific theories are constantly in motion and scientists are constantly discovering new things and thinking about the world in new ways—in other words, there is plenty of room for young scientists to make their mark.

JS: How would you like teachers/librarians to use this book?

RQ: The details of the science aren’t as important for kids to remember as the big picture, and I would love teachers to get really creative and maybe even incorporate the book into an art project.  Clayton has so many different sorts of museum displays in the book, which could be the basis of all sorts of kooky projects. All the bits and pieces in Museum Storage are all vestigial organs that didn’t make it into the book. I would love to see how kids would turn those into exhibits!

JS: Can you give any tips to writers who want to break into nonfiction children’s books?

RQ: I think I’ve been successful as a non-fiction writer because I write about things no one else has written about or things people assume are uninteresting or boring. I truly believe everything is fascinating, if only you look at it the right way.  I also think the best non-fiction books create worlds that are just as compelling and magical as fictional worlds. I really struggle with the “non-fiction” title, actually.  We all know what fiction is: imagination, fantastic worlds, cool characters, illustrations, fun.  So what that does make “non-fiction”?  I try to blur that divide in my books and build worlds for my readers to step into, which I really hope will ignite their curiosity and imagination about the world around them. Also, never underestimate kids!  They are so much smarter than we were!

JS: What are you working on now? 

RQ: We are just finishing up a follow-up to Museum of Odd Body Leftovers. It’s called The Gland Factory: A Tour of Your Body’s Goops, Juices, and Hormones. I was lucky enough work with Clayton Hanmer again and the same amazing team at Greystone Books. Clayton did such a knock-out job on this one. I cannot wait to get my hands on a copy.

That sounds AMAZING! Congrats on the new book and I can’t wait to see it! 

Be sure to check out Rachel’s other works at her website https://www.rachelpoliquin.com/

And see her latest books below!

The Strangest Thing in the Sea book I am Wind book