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    • Gabriele Davis
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    • Tina Athaide
    • Rashmi Bismark, MD, MPH
    • Valerie Bolling
    • Tameka Fryer Brown
    • Aya Khalil
    • Natasha Khan Kazi
    • Kirstie Myvett
    • Alyssa Reynoso-Morris
    • Lisa Stringfellow
    • Kaitlyn Wells
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Interview with Newbery Award Winner & NYT Bestselling Author, Jasmine Warga

11/18/2025

 
Photo of author Jasmine Warga. She has olive-tone skin color, wavy short hair and wears a black and red sweater
Photo by Lillian Warga
We are thrilled to interview Jasmine Warga on our blog today! Read more about her writing process and upcoming middle grade book.
​
What’s the one thing you want children to take away from your book?


I want kids to know that they deserve to be loved exactly as they are. One of the threads that runs through all my books is the power of self-acceptance, and learning how to embrace the parts of yourself that might make you feel different. I always share with kids that the things I was most insecure about myself as a kid are now some of my favorite things about adult me. I also hope that The Unlikely Tale of Chase and Finnegan specifically makes kids understand that if they are struggling with anxiety, they aren't alone. And, of course, I hope it makes them curious about the beauty of the natural world and feel inspired to want to take good care of the Earth and all of its creatures. 

Do you have any tips for pre-published authors?

Stay curious! Stay wondrous! Don't worry so much about trends. What excites you? That is what is going to excite your future readers. Writing is a magic trick. You have to believe in it to get anyone else to, and the best way to do that is to be fully in love and obsessed with the stories you are telling. Write like you won't ever be published. And strangely enough, I feel like that's the kind of writing that gets published. For anyone who is reading this that is pre-published, I can't wait to read your story! 

Is there anything you want readers to know about you or your book(s)?

I'm interested in expanding our definition of what a "diverse" book is. I want to uplift books and stories told by creators of all backgrounds, and understand that their backgrounds inform their writing even if they aren't directly writing about their identity. I always say that all of my books, at their core, are about home and finding belonging. This is because of my own family's history. And this is true whether I'm writing about a refugee girl from Syria, a Mars rover, or a cheetah. And lastly, I'd just like to say I'm so grateful to anyone who reads my books. I always think of stories as a shared dream between a writer and reader, and I'm beyond grateful when people decide to share in that dream with me. 

Jasmine Warga is the #1 New York Times bestselling author of The Unlikely Tale of Chase and Finnegan, A Rover’s Story, The Shape of Thunder, and A Strange Thing Happened in Cherry Hall. Her book Other Words for Home received a Newbery Honor and Walter Honor, among numerous other awards. Here We Are Now and My Heart and Other Black Holes, her novels for teens, have been translated into over twenty-five languages. She lives in the Chicago area with her family.
Picture

So You Want to Write Children’s Books? - Key Takeaways

11/17/2025

 
So You Want to Write Children's Books slide
If you missed the webinar, So You Want to Write Children's Books: The 4-Essential Steps to Getting Started, we have the key takeaways below. To view the slides and webinar, please fill out this form. 
Key Takeaways header image
​
 (4)- Essential Steps to Writing Children's Books 
1. Read 100+ children's books
2. Invest in classes and books on craft
3. Join or build YOUR own kidlit community
4. Keep Writing

Special thanks to our presenters, Tonya Abari and Kirstie Myvett. 
You can connect with them on Instagram at @iamtabari and @kirstiemyauthor. 
slide of Tonya Abari and Kirstie Myvett
KidLit in Color will host several FREE writing webinars in 2026. You'll find more information and how to sign up in our newsletters.

Thank you and keep writing!


The Kidlit in Color Team
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Interview with NYT Bestselling Author Neal Shusterman

11/12/2025

 
Photo of the book cover, Mindworks which has a face on it with different shapes of items like an eyeball, bear, turkey
We are thrilled to have NYT bestselling author Neal Shusterman on our blog again! Read the interview below about his new book, Mindworks. 

KLiC: What was your inspiration for Mindworks? 
 
NS: MindWorks itself is more a collection of past, polished works (with some new polish and additions) that went out of print but feel more relevant than ever. MindWorks is a collection of (almost) all my short fiction. Originally many of these stories came out in smaller collections: MindBenders, MindTwisters, MindQuakes, and MindStorms–as well as individual stories that appeared in other multi-author anthologies.  But many of those came out near the beginning of my career and much has changed since then. Technology has grown, culture has shifted–and I’ve changed, both personally and as a writer! When my publisher approached me about making a full compendium of all those short stories as well as adding new ones, I was excited. Writers often look back on their older work and wish they could make changes, polish it one last time. It’s usually a fantasy, but this time, I actually get to live that fantasy!
 
KLiC: Please tell us about your writing process. How long did it take you to write and sell this book? 
 
NS: My “writing” process for this was really different since most of the stories were already written. It was nostalgic combing back through the stories from my past–some things are so different and yet others are exactly the same. Culture shifts, people change, advancements are made, but the cautionary tales often scream the same warnings about humanity. In fact, the hardest part of revising the stories was including technological changes that are present today but didn’t exist when the stories were first written: the commonality of cellphones, the wider use of a larger, more immediate internet, etc. Those changes often made real plot points moot or inconceivable, or I’d have to make up an in-world rules or character limitations to negate the effects those changes might have on the plot. I wanted to tell the same stories, but through the lens of present day.
 
KLiC: What’s the one thing you want children to take away from your book?
 
NS: Ask questions. You won’t always find the answers. But keep asking questions, keep probing deeper. If something is off or uncanny, dissect it. Find out what it’s made of, what makes it tick, how and why it’s taken the shape that it has. How does it affect you, others, and the world around you? How has the world made it come to be? Just because something is uncomfortable doesn’t mean it isn’t worth exploring. 
 
KLiC: Do you have any tips for pre-published authors?
 
NS: Write the next story. Not just the next “big” story, but every story you can conceive. Don’t get bogged down with rejections, with changes in the industry, with self doubt. Just keep going. Keep learning. Keep reading. And always, always keep writing! Even if it’s on napkins, in the margins of your notes, or in the drafts folder of your inbox. 
 
KLiC: What’s next for you? 
 
NS: The Scythe prequel! Revisiting the Scythedom has come with its own set of challenges–I’ve written myself into a few corners when it comes to the lore. But I see it like a puzzle box, and I enjoy building characters, complexities, and new concepts around those immovable obstacles that have been set in stone by the publication process of the past. 

KLiC: Is there anything you want readers to know about you or your book(s)?
 
NS: As I said, I like readers to ask questions. It goes both ways–it’s what I try to do as well. That’s what my favorite books I’ve written have been inspired by: asking a question. It’s what I do as an author: I ask questions. It doesn’t mean I have the answers. But the questions are still worth asking.

--
​
Neal Shusterman is the New York Times bestselling author of more than thirty award-winning books for children, teens, and adults, including the Unwind dystology, the Skinjacker trilogy, Downsiders, and Challenger Deep, which won the National Book Award. Scythe, the first book in his series Arc of a Scythe is a Michael L. Printz Honor Book. He also writes screenplays for motion pictures and television shows. Neal is the father of four, all of whom are talented writers and artists themselves. Visit Neal at StoryMan.com and Facebook.com/NealShusterman.
Photo of author Neal Shusterman, wearing a black shirt and has curly hair
Photo by Gaby Gerster
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