I was deeply honored to be chosen by Cate as her mentee. With the many rejections and downs of this industry, just being picked was a huge affirmation of my children’s book writing dream. It also meant so much that someone was willing to take a chance on me.
Cate was warm, generous, accessible, and fun. She’s a teacher of picture book writing, so she brought many gifts and strengths to the mentorship. Most of all, she impressed upon me the need to bring a sense of play to writing. For instance, she had me reading fifteen minutes of poetry each day and doing both poetry and free writing exercises. This helped boost my imagination, creativity, and language. She also helped me get in touch with my senses and emotions, which translated into richer picture books. Cate encouraged me to read and analyze many picture books in-depth. I really hit the jackpot with having Cate as my mentor! During the internship, we emailed, texted, and spoke on the phone. Once per month, Cate critiqued several of my manuscripts and reviewed my picture book analyses and writing exercises. She gave me frequent recommendations of picture books and craft books to read, as well as new picture book structures to try. Cate also challenged me to query. Widely. It was a privilege to work (virtually) alongside and get to know Cate as a mentor and friend. She expected a lot from me, but I was enthusiastic to soak up as much from our time as possible. What I loved most was how Cate kept telling me in a dozen different ways how much she believed in me. Her faith instilled greater confidence in my abilities. As I told Cate, now that I know I have the skills and talent, I will never give up!
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![]() For the first time I participated in National Picture Book Writing Week or #NaPiBoWriWee. Created by Paula Yoo (website https://paulayoo.com, twitter https://twitter.com/paulayoo), it’s a challenge to write seven picture book drafts in seven days. Guest authors share daily inspirational posts on her blog, participants cheer for each other on a Facebook page, and Paula awards prizes. It’s also an opportunity to flex some serious writing muscles. I succeeded in meeting the challenge with seven rough (some very rough) drafts. But, it was tough! I do write and revise most days, yet also juggle a family and part-time job. In order to complete this challenge, I had to write some of the drafts at night when I was seriously tired. Sometimes, the creativity just wasn’t there. As expected, these drafts weren’t my best work. However, the challenge helped me take risks I ordinarily wouldn’t take. For example, one of my drafts was a humorous meta alphabet book—definitely a stretch for me—and one I hadn’t considered before. One picture book morphed into an extended poem. And, under the pressure to create, I finally executed a manuscript idea I’d been pondering aimlessly for weeks. I also learned I can force myself to write when I don’t feel like it. At all. Writers have deadlines, of course, so this is an essential skill for my future professional writer self. Although it was difficult at times, especially over a busy family weekend, I’m glad I participated in #NaPiBoWriWee this year. It’s always good to shake things up, try new things, and take more risks. I also made some new writing friends in a supportive writing community. And as one of my critique partners says, no writing is ever wasted … except maybe that story about the goat! Categories: NaPiBoWriWee, picture book contests, challenge
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CategoriesAuthorJennifer Raudenbush Archives
August 2023
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