Author Interviews

The Beekeepers: How Humans Changed the World of Bumble Bees: An Interview with the Author

Honey bees seem to always get the spotlight as pollinators, but bumble Book The Beekeepersbees are important pollinators, too. I am excited to share my interview with Dana L. Church, author of The Beekeepers: How Humans Changed the World of Bumble Bees. This book is chock-full of fascinating information on bumble bees. Be sure to enter the raffle at the end of the post for a change to win a free copy of her book.

 

About the Book

Hi Dana! Thank you for sharing The Beekeepers: How Humans Changed the World of Bumble Bees with me. Before I begin my interview, I have to share a copy of the ARC I received:

Sometimes when I read nonfiction, I like to mark things I want to return to later. Sadly for me, I ran out of my little tabs! So many good nuggets in this book! I am teaching summer school this year and plan to share it with my class. I have not used a middle-grade-length nonfiction book before as a read aloud and am really excited about it. 

Oh my gosh, this photo makes me so happy! I am thrilled to see the book bulging with tabs. (I love those tabs, by the way. Very colorful and they look like a nice size. I’ll have to find some of my own.) And I am so excited that you will be sharing my book with your class. Thank you!


Can you give us a short summary about the book?

Sure. The book is about the relationship between humans and bumble bees over time, and how we have influenced their existence on the planet. For instance, humans brought them to countries where they never existed before, and we have been breeding them on massive scales and shipping them all over the world to pollinate food crops. This has big consequences, such as spreading disease to wild bees. The book also takes a look at what bumble bees are and some pretty cool things that they are capable of. For instance, did you know that bumble bees can learn from other bees, they show evidence of emotion, and they might even be able to imagine pictures in their tiny little brains? I also show that some species of wild bumble bees are in big trouble and what some scientists are doing to help them. Some of these strategies are pretty creative, like using sniffer dogs to find bumble bee nests. Finally, I give readers ideas for little things they can do to help wild bumble bees.

When does it come out?

The book is available now! It was officially released on March 2 of this year.

Tell us who would especially enjoy this book (as it’s more than just people who enjoy insects!).

I think anyone who enjoys nature will enjoy this book, as bumble bees are a big part of the natural world. Anyone who loves animals will enjoy it too, because although it focuses on an animal that is not quite as popular as lions or sharks or wolves, I think it makes you reflect on our relationship with animals as a whole. And if you are interested in nature and animals, the book shows how scientists go about studying those things.

The book begins with a quote and story from Dr. Henry Lickers, an Elder of the Seneca Nation, Turtle Clan, Haudenosaunee. Please share a little bit about this story with us.

Listening to Dr. Lickers share his Traditional Knowledge with me was one of the highlights of writing this book. Besides making scientific research accessible to readers, I also wanted to show that there is a wealth of knowledge about our natural world that exists with the people who are originally from our land. Dr. Lickers shared his story of how he discovered bumble bees as a young boy by stumbling upon a nest in a bale of hay. He wanted to know more about them, so he approached his grandmother, who shared with him the traditional way of how their people interact with bumble bees, and how the lives of humans and bumble bees are closely interconnected.

About the Author
Please give a short summary about your writing journey. Did you enjoy writing as a child? Did you plan on writing middle grade nonfiction, or did you start out writing something else?

Dana L. Church

Photo by Stephen Kingston


As a child I loved writing little stories and making little books of my own. Then, in high school English class, we had to make a children’s picture book. I was hooked! (My book was about a pig who always rolled in the mud and got dirty but his friends loved him anyway.) I wrote fiction for children here and there, but I didn’t pursue it seriously until after I finished university. I tried really hard to get my fiction published, and I came really close a few times, but in the end, I had no luck. I have a science and research background, so I tried my hand at writing a nonfiction article for a middle grade children’s magazine (Odyssey: Adventures in Science. Unfortunately, I don’t think it’s in print anymore). The magazine published it! I wrote another, and it was published in Highlights for Children. I knew I was on to something, so decided to start writing middle grade nonfiction books. For whatever reason, I am just most comfortable writing at the middle grade level. Making science accessible for young readers has become my passion.

Were you always interested in insects? What made you focus on bees (and more specifically bumble bees)?

Not at all! As a kid I loved animals but I was quite scared of insects. When I was in university, I got a summer job as a research assistant for a professor. She studied bumble bees and kept some in her lab. I was tasked with looking after the bees and running experiments with them. I was terrified. I thought, Am I crazy? Why did I apply for this job? I’ll get stung every day! But I was desperate for summer employment.

It wasn’t long before I realized that bumble bees are not bloodthirsty stinging machines. They will let you watch them if you don’t breathe on them (they don’t like the blast of carbon dioxide when you exhale). Their nests are such amazing little hubs of organized activity. I saw “undertaker bees” drag dead bees out of the nest. I saw new bees hatch from their wax cocoons. These new bees were covered in soft, grey fur that would turn the distinctive black and yellow after a couple of days. I saw some worker bees sitting on wax cocoons to keep them warm, and I watched other bees fly tirelessly back and forth between nest and flowers, gathering food. I was no longer terrified. I was fascinated. I was so fascinated that I stuck around to study bumble bees for my PhD.

And you know what? I was never stung.


Research/Writing
How did this book come to “bee”? Did you send a proposal or were you approached to write something on bees?

Originally, I had planned to write a very different book. It was about a fictional 12-year-old girl whose mom was a professor who had a bumble bee lab. The 12-year-old girl helped her mom run the lab and told the reader a whole bunch of bee facts. My editor at Scholastic, Lisa Sandell, suggested, “How about a book about the relationship between bees and humans?” I thought that was a pretty interesting idea, so I started researching and I realized Lisa’s idea was excellent. I wrote a proposal for The Beekeepers and Scholastic signed me up. It ended up being a much better book. I also discovered that I had a special opportunity, through writing this book, to let readers know that bumble bees are in trouble and that we can help them.


Although you have a first-hand experience with bumble bees, what kind of research did you still have to do?

When I first started writing The Beekeepers, my area of expertise was bumble bee behavior and cognition—learning, memory, and problem solving. Chapter Seven of The Beekeepers, which is about bumble bee “smarts,” was easy for me to write. On the other hand, I didn’t know much about other stuff like population ecology, which I had to dive into in order to see how humans have impacted bumble bees. I also knew that there is a whole industry devoted to breeding and selling bumble bee colonies, but I had no idea of the extent of it. Same with pesticides: I had a very surface understanding of their impact on bumble bees and other pollinators, but I needed to learn many more details in order to write about it. I had to do a lot more research.

Most of my research for The Beekeepers involved searching university library databases for scientific journal articles and reading those articles. But sometimes I had questions and I also wanted scientists’ perspectives, so I ended up interviewing a number of scientists, too.

What would you say most of your research entailed: reading scientific journal articles or interviewing experts?

Most of my research involved reading, reading, and reading some more. But I love reading! I did spend quite a bit of time interviewing experts, though. Fun fact: I had never interviewed anyone before I wrote The Beekeepers, so I was quite nervous at first. But I quickly learned that scientists love talking about their research and they are excited when someone shows interest in what they are studying. I met so many cool people. Now I’m not nervous at all when I interview experts and I have come to really enjoy it. You never know what interesting, funny, or fascinating nugget of information scientists will share.

What was the most fascinating tidbit you researched?

Hmm…probably research that used sniffer dogs trained to find bumble bee nests. I didn’t know that dogs can be trained to sniff out all kinds of different endangered species. Dogs are a clever way to find bumble bee nests because the nests are usually underground and very hard for people to find.

Did you go anywhere interesting as part of your research?

Unfortunately, no. But I didn’t have to go far to see bumble bees because they visit our backyard garden. We even had a bumble bee nest underneath our shed! We could tell because bumble bees kept flying in and out from one spot hidden in the grass by the base of the shed.

What ended up taking more time than you anticipated when researching/writing/revising?

Probably editing or revising. No matter how many times I read my writing, there’s always something I want to change or add. I eventually have to tell myself to STOP.

Since there were so many interesting things in this book, pick one of these topics to explain to us: sonication, bumble bees as pollinators, bee tagging, or string-pulling task.

How about bee tagging? In The Beekeepers, I feature research that required scientists to keep track of the behavior and movements of individual bees in a nest. The scientists cut out teeny-tiny squares of paper with a QR-type code on them and glued one to each bee’s back. A computer can then track each bee.

This bee tagging technique is quite different from when I tagged bumble bees in school years ago. To tell bumble bees apart, I had to glue tiny, colored, numbered, plastic discs to the back of each bee. (Yes, you can buy bee tags! Some honey bee keeping supply companies sell them.) When I was done, I could identify each bee by a color and a number: Yellow 5, Blue 7, Red 36, etc. To glue the disc to their back, I used long tweezers to hold the bee by her back legs, I placed her on a soft sponge, and then I glued the disc to her back. I did all of this under a red light because bees can’t see red very well, so if they escaped there was less chance that they would fly up and sting me. When I was done, I placed them back inside their nest, which, in our lab, was a wooden box. The tags didn’t affect the bees’ flight or movement at all. I guess it is sort of like wearing a backpack.

I enjoyed tagging bees. It is certainly a skill. I was certain that if I was relaxed while I tagged them, the bees were more relaxed, too.

I wonder what bee tagging techniques will exist down the road as technology advances?


For Teachers
Any suggestions for ways to use The Beekeepers in the classroom? 

Teacher guides for The Beekeepers are not ready yet, but the book can certainly be used to spark conversations about how we can help protect and conserve bees, even in our own backyards, whether you live in a city or in the country. What are students’ favorite bee facts? What other wild bees besides bumble bees exist out there? How are they the same or different from bumble bees?

Are you doing school visits related to this book? Tell us more! 

Yes! I would love to do school visits. Probably grades 4-7 are best, since The Beekeepers is aimed at readers aged 8-12.

I actually have my first virtual school visit coming up in less than a month. I can talk about science, bees, writing, or all of the above. And most of all, I can answer students’ questions! I love to hear what students are curious about.

How can we learn more about you? 

My website is www.danachurchwriter.com, and I’m on Twitter: @DanaLChurch. I post a #BeeFactFriday on Twitter each Friday. You can drop me a note or ask questions by email, too: dana@danachurchwriter.com.

Thanks for your time, Dana.

It was my pleasure! Thank you so much, Natalie. This was fun.

Dana L. Church will be giving a copy of The Beekeepers: How Humans Changed the World of Bumble Bees to a lucky reader. Enter the giveaway below for a chance to win a copy. (U.S. addresses only)

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The Beekeepers: How Humans Changed the World of Bumble Bees is available here:

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The Most Perfect Interview with Author Tricia Springstubb

Author Tricia Springstubb

I’m very excited today to welcome author Tricia Springstubb to The Mixed-Up Files of Middle-Grade Authors! We’re here to talk about her newest middle-grade novel The Most Perfect Thing in the Universe.

Before we get started, let’s take a look at the book.

Eleven-year-old Loah Londonderry is definitely a homebody. While her mother, a noted ornithologist, works to save the endangered birds of the shrinking Arctic tundra, Loah anxiously counts the days till her return home. But then, to Loah’s surprise and dismay, Dr. Londonderry decides to set off on a perilous solo quest to find the Loah bird, long believed extinct. Does her mother care more deeply about Loah the bird than Loah her daughter?

Things get worse yet when Loah’s elderly caretakers fall ill and she finds herself all alone except for her friend Ellis. Ellis has big problems of her own, but she believes in Loah. She’s certain Loah has strengths that are hidden yet wonderful, like the golden feather tucked away on her namesake bird’s wing. When Dr. Londonderry’s expedition goes terribly wrong, Loah needs to discover for herself whether she has the courage and heart to find help for her mother, lost at the top of the world. 

 

The Most Perfect Thing in the Universe is available for preorder now and releases June 1, 2021.

MH:  When and where did you get the idea for The Most Perfect Thing in the Universe?

TS:  A writer’s mind is a wild, unpredictable place. Ideas lurk about. You glimpse one from the corner of your eye but before you can catch it, it has slipped back into the shadows. Maybe you get another chance–this time it lingers long enough to walk beside you for a while before it disappears again, leaving you to puzzle out what to make of it…

…which is my devious way of saying, I don’t exactly know where I got the idea for Loah!  If I look at my files, I can see I first tried to write about her back in 2017. The files have names like Loah After Retreat and Loah After Mary Jane’s House(two of many places I worked on the book) and Loah Yet Again. I set out to write a historical novel, something I’d never done. I did research, which I loved, and began a story about a timid, turn of the century girl who lived in an ambiguous European country in a spooky house with her ancient caretakers. Her beloved older sister vanishes; an orphan seeks refuge. But my world-building was shaky–I kept making things up rather than sticking to established historical facts. After many tries and lots of frustration, I had to admit I lacked the discipline to stay within set bounds of time and place.

But by then I was too in love with Loah to let her go. She became a timid contemporary girl who lives in a spooky house with ancient caretakers. It’s her beloved mother who vanishes, her new friend Ellis who hides out with her. The birds came winging in on their own. Birds have flitted through so many of my books–a sparrow even gets its own little arc in Every Single Second–and here they settled in and became central to the story.

MH: Was there a time you thought you might give up on this book? What did you do to get through that?

TS: More than one time! I especially remember one gray January afternoon. I’d been working all morning, and had just introduced a brand new character, a snarky woman wearing a hat made of faux-giraffe-skin. What in the world was she doing there? I went for a long, desolate walk. Getting away from the desk helped me realize that I was writing loony scenes in an effort to distract readers (and myself!)  from the fact that I’d lost my story’s thread. I needed to think more deeply about who Loah was, what she needed and wanted. What was my story about, and what was it reallyabout? The woman in the giraffe hat got the axe (though who knows–she may yet turn up in a different story, where she actually belongs).

I do endless revisions for all my books, but usually one thing remains constant the–the setting, the situation, the conflict. For The Most Perfect Thing in the Universe, it was Loah. She may be my favorite of all the young heroes I’ve written.

MH: What do you like about writing for MG readers?

TS: Pretty much everything! Kids this age brim with curiosity. They love to laugh. They are vulnerable and brave and they will commit to a story like nobody’s business. Middle grade readers demand strong plots, but they’re also sophisticated enough to appreciate nuance. Their sense of justice and their hopes for the world make me want to be a better person as well as a better writer. Their eyes are so wide and their hearts so big!

MH: Was this your original title?

TS: Yes, except for all those working titles I mentioned when Loah’s story was a different book. The title was a gift that came to me during my research. It’s drawn from a quote from the nineteenth-century naturalist Thomas Wentworth Higginson, who wrote, “I think that, if required on pain of death to instantly name the most perfect thing in the universe, I should risk my fate on….”

Well, I am not going to give the rest away!

Wouldn’t filling in that blank be a fun classroom writing prompt?

MH: Tell us something fascinating you discovered while researching this book.

TS: Each year Arctic terns make a round trip migration of up to 25,000 miles, the longest recorded migration of any animal on the planet. Much of their route is over water–how do they do it without the GPS lady? Sadly, due to climate change, Arctic terns, like far too many species of animals and plants, face increasing challenges to their habitat and survival. Research made me even more aware than I’d been of Earth’s precious, fragile inter-connections. We can all help protect and preserve. The Audubon Society has wonderful suggestions for how we can become nature’s advocates, starting in our own neighborhoods.

MH: Now time for a Quick-Answer Finish-This-Sentence Round. Ready?

          TS: Sure!

MH: Recently, I’ve been very interested in learning about…

          TS:   … dogs, for my new novel.

MH: The best thing that happened to me yesterday was …

           TS:  … helping my neighbor get a vaccine appointment.

MH: I can’t help but laugh out loud when …. 

            TS: … my tiny granddaughter imitates Elsa.

MH: I’m looking forward to ….

           TS: … visiting schools and young readers for real.

MH: I really like the smell of …. 

           TS: … licorice.

MH: If I weren’t a writer, I might like to be a …

           TS: … person who delivers flowers.

Well, if Tricia Springstubb showed up on my doorstep with flowers, I would welcome her smiling face! But I am very, very happy she’s writing thoughtful, engaging, entertaining middle-grade fiction for all of us.  Thank you, Tricia!

Tell us about your favorite Tricia Springstubb book! Leave a comment below.

 

 

 

 

Ena Jones Interview & Two Giveaways

I’m thrilled to welcome Ena Jones back to the Mixed-Up Files…of Middle-Grade Authors to celebrate the release of her newest novel, SIX FEET BELOW ZERO.

Credit: McCardell Photography

Credit: McCardell Photography

Ena Jones writes contemporary middle-grade fiction (for children ages 8-12). She grew up in Northern Virginia, on the outskirts of Washington, DC, and currently lives in North Carolina. She loves to read a wide variety of books, hole up in her office and write fun stories, take long walks along the ocean, and cook yummy meals for family and friends.

You can find her on her website, Twitter, and Instagram.

Here’s a link to the SIX FEET BELOW ZERO Educator’s Guide, courtesy of Holiday House.

 

 

What inspired you to write this book—and were there any surprises along the way?

A photo of Marie Jones, the inspiration for the character of Great-Grammy.

SIX FEET BELOW ZERO sprouted from a simple idea. I wanted to explore the question of guardianship, something both parents and kids think about. There’s always a fear: Where will the children end up if something happens to the parents? And will a new guardian have the best interests of the kids at heart? We all know that, from both parent and child perspectives, there are people who are not suited to the role of caregiver. And that’s where I started my “What if .  . .” questions.

The first character that came to me was “Great-Grammy,” who was inspired by my husband’s grandmother. I wanted a person who would find a way to protect the children any way she could, even if she weren’t around to do it herself. My husband’s grandmother was that kind of real-life force.

As for surprises, writing a novel is one long series of them. But the biggest surprise was that I found the courage to write—and finish—the book at all. I tried very hard to talk myself out of it, and even enlisted others to tell me it was a bad idea, mostly because of the role of the freezer. The entire concept seemed absurd for a middle grade novel. But as I wrote more and more scenes, the 10-year-old inside of me kept chuckling. And the heart of the story really meant something to me, so here we are a few years later.

 

I’m glad you didn’t talk yourself out of writing it! I love the heart of the story–and how it encourages readers to appreciate their families and things they often take for granted. You kept me chuckling throughout the book, too.

I love how fleshed out and unique all your characters are. What pieces of you and your life are in SIX FEET BELOW ZERO?

I’ll go back to my husband’s grandmother here, too. She lived on 10 acres of land just outside of Washington, DC, and we would visit her with our children and have the best time tromping around her property. As I wrote the book, I pictured her, the house, the wildlife and trees, and definitely the hundreds of groundhog holes! Revisiting that time in our lives was the best part of writing this story.

Here’s a photo of  my favorite tree on Marie’s property. Look closely, and you’ll see a swing she put up preparing for one of our visits.

 

 

Beginnings are so hard to nail…but yours sucked me in immediately. How did you decide where to start your book? 

The beginnings of books are hard! But they are so important. They’re the gateway into a story, where a reader will either keep going, or think “Meh,” and go on to the next book—or maybe out for ice cream.

I decided to play with a flashback approach. Flashbacks don’t always work, but I knew what I wanted: a compelling and humorous scene to kick off the story and act as a promise to readers about what’s to come. Something that might entice even the most reluctant readers to be curious about Rosie and Baker’s backstory, and all the events, personality-types, and attitudes, that led up to the BIG AWFUL THING that forever changed Rosie and Baker’s lives and ushered them into their “new normal.” 

First I tried an opening that took place at the midpoint of the story, where Rosie and Baker sat in a police station doing their best not to answer questions about their great-grandmother’s whereabouts. But the siblings didn’t know enough about their predicament yet, so that didn’t work.

After a bit of trial and error, I landed on a place further along in the story, at a point when they fully realized the foe they were up against and the stakes involved. And that’s where I found my beginning: Rosie starting an urgent last-chance email to her Aunt Tilly, letting everything the siblings had been through spill out.

And that’s the beginning that stuck.

 

What type of research did you need to do?

It seemed that I was always researching something. Trees, wills, historic graves, locks, and of course freezers . . . the list was endless. I even researched hairstyles. I needed a good one for Grim Hesper!

 

I love how you sprinkled humor throughout a book with a serious topic. What tips can you share for blending the two? 

For me, it all comes back to knowing the characters and their relationships with each other. Maybe characters are dealing with a serious or sad situation, but that doesn’t mean they’ve suddenly become other people. They are still themselves!

For instance, in SIX FEET BELOW ZERO, there’s a scene where Rosie and Baker, as they grieve the loss of their great-grandmother, have agreed to come together to do something that seems almost impossible.

The thing is, even in the midst of that difficult scene, they must deal with each other’s quirks and their own shortcomings. There’s a unique opportunity to hit on unspoken truths when feelings let loose under stress, especially between siblings. Who else would you let your guard down with?

Also, normal everyday things continue to happen, that ordinarily wouldn’t be a big deal, but within the serious and sad scenario Rosie and Baker have found themselves in, they get a chuckle.

So I guess that would be my biggest tip for balancing humor within a serious scene or story: When something big, scary, and/or bad, is happening, remember to add your characters’ personalities to the mix, whether those traits are annoying or endearing, and also throw in some evidence that real life hasn’t stopped just because characters are handling (or not handling!) the big, scary, or bad, things.

 

Thanks so much for those awesome tips! Can you share a writing exercise with us?

A few years ago I was at an SCBWI conference in Florida, and took a full day workshop led by Elizabeth Law, Backlist & Special Projects Editor at Holiday House Books, and Greg Pincus, screenwriter. They spent the day comparing writing stories for children with writing screenplays and developing movie concepts, and it was so much fun!

One of the most memorable parts for me was the segment about “Poster-izing Your Book,” as in movie poster. It’s the line that isn’t a blurb, or synopsis sentence, but that captures the essence of your story in a short sentence or two. It’s what you almost always see on movie posters at the theatre. Do an online image search for “movie posters” and you’ll pull up thousands of examples.

It was at that workshop where I came up with the idea we’re now using to introduce SIX FEET BELOW ZERO: 

A dead body. A missing will. An evil relative. 

The good news is, Great Grammy has a plan. The bad news is, she’s the dead body.

I highly suggest writers use this strategy on the book they’re writing, no matter what stage it’s in. It helps to study as many movie posters as possible, and then get to work. Fill a few notebook pages with words and short phrases that describe your book, and then start to put them together.

Try it. You’ll love it!

And if you ever have the opportunity to take this particular workshop led by Elizabeth and Greg, don’t miss it!

 

Wow! That sounds like an incredible workshop. I love your exercise! It’s fantastic for writers and I can picture teachers and students poster-izing books and movies and letting others guess what they are. 

Is there anything else you’d like to tell the Mixed-Up Files readers?

I write books that are contemporary, but have a “This would never happen!” vibe. The thing is, I’m basically that kid—my character—when I’m writing. In my world, it not only could happen, it did. I hope readers will connect with the characters in SIX FEET BELOW ZERO, but mostly I hope they enjoy the ride.

I also want to thank Elizabeth Law and Greg Pincus, who graciously allowed me to share the above exercise.

 

I definitely enjoyed the ride. 🙂 Thanks so much for stopping by the Mixed-Up Files again, Ena…and for generously donating a copy of SIX FEET BELOW ZERO, a bookmark and recipe card to two lucky winners. Enter the Rafflecopters below!

A dead body. A missing will. An evil relative. The good news is, Great Grammy has a plan. The bad news is, she’s the dead body.

Rosie and Baker are hiding something. Something big. Their great grandmother made them promise to pretend she’s alive until they find her missing will and get it in the right hands. The will protects the family house from their grandmother, Grim Hesper, who would sell it and ship Rosie and Baker off to separate boarding schools. They’ve already lost their parents and Great Grammy–they can’t lose each other, too.

The siblings kick it into high gear to locate the will, keep their neighbors from prying, and safeguard the house. Rosie has no time to cope with her grief as disasters pop up around every carefully planned corner. She can’t even bring herself to read her last-ever letter from Great Grammy. But the lies get bigger and bigger as Rosie and Baker try to convince everyone that their great grandmother is still around, and they’ll need more than a six-month supply of frozen noodle casserole and mountains of toilet paper once their wicked grandmother shows up!

 

One copy of SIX FEET BELOW ZERO is open to everyone in the U.S. and Puerto Rico.

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One copy of SIX FEET BELOW ZERO will go to a teacher, media specialist or book blogger in the U.S. or Puerto Rico. 

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Winners will be announced on April 15. Good luck everyone!