MarcyKate Connolly

Making Space for Growth and Inspiration

This post was originally sent through my author newsletter on May 5th, 2023. To subscribe to my newsletter and receive up-to-date news, musings, and more, click HERE.


"The book will tell you what to do, if you make space for it." 

That's one of the things Christopher Denise, author/illustrator of the Caldecott Honor Book Knight Owl (and illustrator of many other acclaimed children's books) shared during his keynote speech at the New England Society of Children's Book Writers & Illustrators conference last weekend—and it stuck with me. 

Christopher talked a lot about making space: for creativity, for productivity, for growth. He talked about being open: to sparks of inspiration, to projects that seem challenging, to new directions. The theme of the conference was "STRETCH," and many of the workshops were about pushing past boundaries and comfort zones, but Christopher also interpreted the theme as being able to step back—and being willing to go deep. 

Being at the conference was shoving me out of my comfort zone.

I was definitely stretching. 

The "stretch" wasn't the conference itself; I'd attended before, in 2014. I was pre-published. The Distance Between Lost and Found had sold to HarperCollins, and I'd completed my edits, but I was still 10 months away from the release date. I was there with my friend Janae Marks—and it was at this conference that I first met my eventual coauthor, MarcyKate Connolly, face to face!

Pardon the extremely fuzzy 2014 photo. ;) 

So, the conference environment itself felt familiar. But this was my first time being on faculty at any sort of professional conference, leading workshops for my peers. I felt confident in my knowledge of the workshop topics: planning and booking school visits (with Janae) and co-authoring a book (with MarcyKate). I didn't feel confident that anyone there would be interested in what I, a decidedly non-famous, solidly midlist author, had to say. 

My workshops were both scheduled for Sunday, and so on Saturday, I listened to Christopher's inspiring keynote speech, then popped back up to my hotel room to do a couple hours of work on the book revision that was due on Monday. After lunch, I sat in on MarcyKate's first workshop, about creating magic systems for fantasy novels. Then, I went to a workshop for published authors, led by a bookstore employee and a school librarian, with tips for connecting with independent bookstores and libraries. 

In the magic workshop, I came up with an inkling of a new idea—something that might just dovetail perfectly with another topic I've wanted to write about for years, but couldn't figure out how to tackle. In the bookstore/library workshop, I took pages and pages of notes on tactics I may implement to more effectively spread the word about my books.  

That evening, I thought about those two sessions as I went over my notes for my own workshops the next day. And when it was finally time for me to be standing at the front of the room, slideshow cued up, I felt ready. (Or at least, as ready as I could ever be...) 

The workshop on school visits was first, and it was a full house! Standing room only! The room was about 50/50 authors who'd done school visits before and those who hadn't, but wanted to dive in. Janae and I tried to be thorough and honest, particularly about the sometimes thorny topic of setting your fees. We took questions—and suggestions, when someone in the audience had a slightly different point of view based on their own experience. The thing about school visits is, every school is different. Every single one! Different budgets. Different culture. Different atmosphere. Different priorities. While there are definitely some tried-and-true tips for making school visits a part of your author platform, there are other elements that you have to figure out on the fly—every time. 

I finished that workshop feeling absolutely exhilarated. We'd made our points, we'd stayed open to audience participation and conversation, and we seemed to have genuinely helped especially the newbie authors start to think about how they could incorporate school visits into their offerings. 

But I still had one workshop to go!

After lunch, MarcyKate and I were set to talk about the co-authoring process. This workshop also went well—but it was very different. The audience was small, so we decided to go for a more casual vibe. We followed our presentation outline, but also went off on a few tangents based on what people were interested in hearing about co-authoring and about our upcoming book. It felt more like a chat amongst friends than a workshop. Which was fine, and fun! 

And then I quickly changed shoes, turned in my faculty lanyard, and speed-walked to the train station to catch my Amtrak back to NYC. 

Now, as I reflect on what ended up being a very successful weekend (even though I signed zero—ZERO!—books at the faculty book signing, haha...), I have a few more thoughts on making space for inspiration and growth: 

1) Sign up to do the scary thing. Presenting at this conference wasn't my idea; Janae invited me to submit a workshop with her, and then I asked MarcyKate if she wanted to submit a second one. I don't know if I would have had the courage or the confidence to do this on my own! But I am so glad I did. 

2) Take advantage of opportunities. Part of the compensation for being on faculty at the conference was getting to attend for free! I did have some work that had to get done, but I'm so happy I made time to sit in on a couple workshops. The info I learned in the bookstore/library one will be so valuable to me moving forward—and I made a personal connection with one of the presenters. Meanwhile, I can't stop thinking about the idea I had in the session on magic systems. I truly feel like I have cracked this other topic I wanted to write about wide open. (Sorry-not-sorry to be vague...) Would I have come to this new idea without having been in that room, with those people, thinking about that subject (creating rules for a system of magic)? I don't know—but I do know that an idea you can't stop thinking about is magic in itself. 

3) Make space to be in community. The official theme of the conference may have been "STRETCH," but it might as well have been "JOY." Everyone was just so happy to be with one another in person! And even though I wasn't reconnecting with as many friends (I'm technically a member of the New York chapter of SCBWI), I felt that joy as well. To be in a room filled with hundreds of storytellers, celebrating the stories that we create and the readers for whom we create them...it's a dream. Getting away from "real life' for a weekend isn't always easy, but I was reminded that I need that community—that space. 

And now I'm home, processing everything I learned and thinking about what could be next! (And getting tons of snuggles from my kiddo!) 

What do you do to make space in your creative life? It doesn't have to be as big as a conference or retreat. Do you have everyday ways of feeding your creativity and giving yourself room to grow? 

~Kathryn 


What I'm: 

Reading: After spending the weekend with Janae, I picked up her third novel (and the sequel to her debut), On Air With Zoe Washington. I don't want to spoil the events of the first Zoe Washington book for those who haven't read it, but I do want to say that I love Janae's writing. She has such a perfect middle-grade voice: able to tackle tough topics while also staying in the sweet spot of tween/young teen interests and drama. I can't wait to read Janae's next book!

Working on: I turned in my revision of the write-for-hire book on Monday, and on Wednesday, MarcyKate and I received our first-pass pages for The Thirteenth Circle. First-pass pages are basically a final proofread, after the manuscript has been formatted for printing. Once we approve this version, it won't be terribly long before advance copies start making their way out into the world.

Loving: An attendee at my school visit workshop with Janae took this picture, as we were each introducing ourselves and our books. While it's admittedly not the most flattering picture that's ever been taken of me, I love having this record of what turned out to be a pretty cool "first" in my career! 

My Next Book Has a Cover!

This post was originally sent through my author newsletter on March 24th, 2023. To subscribe to my newsletter and receive up-to-date news, musings, and more, click HERE.


Did you catch the cover reveal this week for my next book, The Thirteenth Circle? Just in case you missed it, take a moment to bask in this image of utter amazing-ness: 

Seriously, how great is that?! It's fun but also a little spooky. Those glowing green orbs give off major "X-Files" vibes. And did you spot the shadowy figures in the background, lurking in the cornfields? Plus all the little details, like the green alien heads on Cat's black shirt and the Erlenmeyer flask Dani is clutching tightly as she runs. (There was even an "X-Files" episode called "The Erlenmeyer Flask" in season one...) I don't know if there's anything I'd do differently on here, to be honest. It's just perfect. 

Once a book has a cover, it definitely starts feeling more real. But that's not all that's happening in the world of The Thirteenth Circle right now. MarcyKate and I also got to see sample interior design pages, and we will receive a full set of designed pages for proofreading (this is called "first-pass pages" in publishing) within the next few weeks. 

The book will also soon be available as an eARC, or Advance Reader Copy. This is for reviewers and booksellers and librarians to get an early sneak peek—and to start spreading the word! Once those digital galleys start going out, and people are actually reading it...whew. The thing is happening! 

Some books have beta-readers, a.k.a. people the author trusts to read early drafts and offer feedback. With this book, having a coauthor kind of meant MarcyKate and I were each other's beta-readers. We didn't send it to anyone else to critique, because we were constantly going back and forth between the two of us. And then, once our agents got involved—and especially after we sold it to a publisher—we had professional feedback coming in. All of which to say, at this point, no one but the two of us, our agents (and their assistants), and our publishing team has read this book. 

So having it start to feed out to READERS feels scary and exciting, all at once! 

This is an interesting time in a book's life. We, the authors, have done just about all of the work we'll ever do on the manuscript. It's very nearly out of our hands. But the actual publication date is still over nine months away! In between comes a lot of waiting and crossing fingers and dropping little teasers and details and waiting some more. With every month that passes between now and release day, it becomes less and less ours. On January 30th, 2024, it's yours

And we hope you love it as much as we do. 

~Kathryn 


What I'm: 

Reading: I read Nona the Ninth, the third book in the Locked Tomb series, when the library hold appeared on my phone. It was amazing, just as mind-bendy (maybe even a little more so) than the previous two. But my eye wasn't quite ready for that much text, so I'm back to audiobooks! I am now listening to In the Woods by Tana French. This is technically the first book in the series of Irish murder mysteries I mentioned last newsletter, but it's from the point of view of a different detective, so I don't feel too spoiled by already having listened to book two. 

Watching: This is totally random, but...have you seen "Snack vs. Chef" on Netflix? It involves professional chefs attempting to recreate common snack foods, like Flamin' Hot Cheetos and Kit-Kats, without a recipe. The results are...mixed. Making snacks (especially without the help of, you know, an automated factory) is hard! 

Listening to: Somehow, I missed listening to Maggie Rogers when she released her first album in 2019. I suspect it's because I was neck-deep in Baby Shark and other toddler requests at the time. Suffice it to say, I really like her! Great singer-songwriter vibes. 

Loving: I know I share a lot of my daughter's art in this newsletter, but it really does bring me so much joy. Here is a quick sketch she did of me earlier this week, when she was home sick with a nasty cold and I was attempting to work while also entertaining her. I think it fully captures my working-mom-with-a-healing-eyeball essence...

Do Authors Get to Watch Other Authors Do School Visits?

This post was originally sent through my author newsletter on February 10th, 2023. To subscribe to my newsletter and receive up-to-date news, musings, and more, click HERE.


It's not often that authors get to observe other authors' school visits.

Yes, we watch each other give speeches and lead workshops at conferences and industry events. And yes, we can attend seminars on how to give effective school presentations, led by authors who are known for their school visit skills. But as for actually being a fly on the wall in a room with an author, their slideshow, and dozens (or even hundreds) of actual kids? If you're not also a teacher or librarian, that's rare. 

When I joined the Visiting Author Committee at my daughter's elementary school in the fall, I was thinking mostly about what I, an author with a number of connections in the publishing industry, could bring to the school community. (I also wanted to learn more about pitching myself as a presenter!) What I didn't consider at the time was the value of being in the room to watch other authors share their presentations. 

Yesterday, I got to watch author/illustrator Rina Deshpande talk to the kindergarteners about her debut picture book, Yoga Nidra Lullaby. I didn't know Rina before this; she was recommended by another person on the Visiting Author Committee. But I ended up in charge of Rina's author visit, which meant meeting her and getting her checked into the school, helping her set up in the auditorium, introducing her to the kids and teachers, and getting her books distributed to the classrooms and the school library. 

I also got to watch her present, and it was such a treat. 

Rina used to be an educator herself, and she now leads workshops for educators. For 35 minutes, I watched as she calmly and capably wrapped 150+ five-year-olds around her little finger. She read a few pages from the book. She talked about where her idea for her story came from, and how she made the artwork. She did yoga and breathing exercises with the kids to keep them engaged physically. She let them share with their neighbors. She took questions—most of which were actually comments. ("I have a stuffed cat at home." "I have a real cat! His name is..." "Why do you love your cat so much?") Watching her was a little like taking a master class in school visit management. I'm very glad I got to be there! 

I have a few more in-person school visits on the horizon this spring and even into the fall, and at least one of them involves speaking to kindergarteners. (All of my in-person school visits so far have been for grades 2 and 3.) My daughter is in kindergarten, so I do understand how to interact on her level...but I've never tried to keep the attention of 150 five-year-olds at once!

From Rina, yesterday, I saw about how much content it's actually possible to get through in half an hour. I saw how she paced her presentation. I saw how she included moments for the kids to talk amongst themselves, moments for them to move their bodies, and moments for them to sit still and listen. Not everything she did is relevant to me and my books, but it was still incredibly helpful to see her in action. 

Maybe I'll never be one of those authors that goes on the road for weeks at a time, visiting school after school after school, but I do want school presentations to be a part of my author career going forward. Making this a focus of my career means striving to get better at it. I'm so grateful that, in volunteering my time at my daughter's school, I inadvertently found a learning opportunity for myself. 

~Kathryn


What I'm: 

Reading: My Thirteenth Circle coauthor, MarcyKate Connolly, is very prolific, and this past week, I read one of her books, The Star Shepherd. It's a middle-grade fantasy about a boy and his father who are tasked with rescuing fallen stars and catapulting them back into the sky. When it seems like someone is cutting down the stars, the boy goes on a journey to fight back the looming darkness. MarcyKate has such an incredible imagination. (It's one of the reasons I asked her to write a book with me!) If you are a fantasy fan, definitely check out her books! 

Watching: "Fleishman is in Trouble" on Hulu. This series was AMAZING. So moving and thought-provoking. A meditation on middle-age, relationships, friendships, motherhood... But! Be warned, there is a depiction of a traumatic birth experience. If that is something that would be hard for you to see, maybe save this series (and the book its based on) for another time. 

Eating: A box of dark chocolate Godiva truffles my husband got me as an early Valentine's Day gift.  Yum!  

Loving: My daughter's school is doing a Readathon this month! We already read a lot in this house, but we've been making an extra effort (and logging our minutes) since the Readathon kicked off a week ago. With a kindergartener, we do a mix of reading to her and sitting with her while she works through one of her learning-to-read books. Last night, she read Go, Otto, Go! by David Milgrim all by herself! (She only needed help on one word: "nowhere.") What a joy.