Nature as a Nurturer by Kerry Aradhya

I’m excited to welcome author Kerry Aradhya to Frog on a Blog! Her debut picture book, Ernő Rubik and His Magic Cube, which is a biography of Hungarian architect and inventor Erno Rubik, the creator of the iconic Rubik’s Cube, just published this month by Peachtree. As you may know, the focus of my blog changed this year to feature animal and nature-themed picture books almost exclusively, so when Kerry reached out to say that nature played a pivotal role in Rubik’s creative process, I was intrigued. I asked Kerry to write a guest post about the role nature played in Rubik’s creative process and how nature might also help the creative process of picture book authors. Lucky us, she gladly agreed! Please read Kerry’s fantastic guest article below. If you’re a picture book writer or any type of creative, you just might be inspired!

Nature as a Nurturer by Kerry Aradhya

What do you do when you’re stuck on a revision or can’t quite figure out the ending (or maybe the middle, if you’re like me) of your latest picture book manuscript? Has nature ever factored into your solution?

In Ernő Rubik and His Magic Cube (my debut picture book with illustrator Kara Kramer), Ernő Rubik encounters his own unique problems as he sets out to design a cube made up of smaller cubes that twist and turn around each other. One of those problems is that he needs a way to hold all the smaller cubes together so his three-dimensional model doesn’t fall apart. Although his passion for puzzles and his background in art and architecture came in handy, it was nature that arguably played the biggest role in helping him find a solution.

During my research for this book, I learned that young Ernő Rubik spent many summer vacations by the lake with his family, and those memories stayed with him throughout his life. In his memoir Cubed: The Puzzle of Us All, Rubik poetically describes several of his experiences by the lake, including how the water and surrounding hills transformed during a storm. “There is darkening in the water, then a white line races towards you, followed closely by a pitch-black mass, which only a second ago was an innocent, gentle green,” he writes. He clearly understood the power, surprise, and inspiration that nature can bestow.

Interior from Erno Rubik and His Magic Cube. Text © 2024 by Kerry Aradhya. Illustrations © 2024 by Kara Kramer. Used with permission from Peachtree Publishing Inc. All rights reserved.

Years later, it was during a walk by another body of water—the Danube River—that Ernő Rubik came up with the idea to use a round internal mechanism to hold all the pieces of his cube together. Watching the river water swirling and twirling around some round pebbles along the shore was the impetus. When he set out for his walk that day, Rubik probably had no idea how it would affect his creative process. But, given his lifelong connection to nature, he likely had an inkling that it could affect it in some way.

Interior from Erno Rubik and His Magic Cube. Text © 2024 by Kerry Aradhya. Illustrations © 2024 by Kara Kramer. Used with permission from Peachtree Publishing Inc. All rights reserved.

As I reflect back on all the manuscripts I’ve written over the years, I see that nature has played a role in my creative process as well. In fact, I recently (meaning just a few minutes ago, as I was writing this post) reviewed all the poems I have published in children’s magazines and discovered that two-thirds of them have nature themes! Now that I’m thinking about it, I do remember walking in our neighborhood many times, paying attention to the sights and sounds around me, letting my mind roam freely, catching any interesting ideas that fluttered by, so I could play with them when I got home.

Although it’s difficult to find the time and resources for overnight writing retreats, I’ve been fortunate to have gone on a few over the past decade. The longest was a week spent at the Wellstone Center in the Redwoods, near the Santa Cruz Mountains in Northern California. Nestled among the redwoods, with a garden outside my door and trails through the forest only steps away, I had one of the most productive weeks I’ve ever had in terms of my creative writing.

In each of these scenarios, being away from my normal environment, responsibilities, and stressors allowed me to relax and open my mind, because that’s what nature does—whether you’re in it for days, hours, or merely minutes. So next time you’re stuck on a revision or can’t quite figure out the ending (or maybe the middle, if you’re like me) of your latest picture book manuscript, consider spending some time in nature. It could affect your creative process in ways you might not expect, or even realize. Nature is powerful, surprising, inspiring. Nature is a nurturer.


Kerry Aradhya has loved puzzling over words and immersing herself in the creative process ever since she was a little girl growing up in Erie, Pennsylvania. She is the author of the picture book biography Ernő Rubik and His Magic Cube (Peachtree, 2024) and more than a dozen poems in award-winning children’s magazines such as Babybug, Ladybug, and Highlights High Five. She also supports young writers in her role as a mentor and collaborating artist with the nonprofit Society of Young Inklings. 

When not writing for children, Kerry works as a freelance science writer and editor, performs with a quirky modern dance ensemble, and occasionally muses about children’s literature and dance at her blog, Picture Books & Pirouettes. She lives in the San Francisco Bay Area with her husband, their two daughters, and one cute but naughty pooch named Sofie.

To keep up with Kerry, visit her website https://www.kerryaradhya.com/. Or follow her on social media: Twitter/X: https://twitter.com/kerryaradhya, Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/kerry.aradhya/, Blog: http://kerryaradhya.blogspot.com

3 thoughts on “Nature as a Nurturer by Kerry Aradhya

  1. Thanks for sharing this insight. I love the phrase “Nature as a nurturer” and couldn’t agree more! I was at a book launch last Tuesday and a group of us went out afterwards and a few people were talking about retreats they’d been on and it makes me want to go on one even more!! Some Day …

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