Interview Alert: Ronni Diamondstein

Headshot photo credit: Randi Childs

Please welcome author Ronni Diamondstein to Frog on a Blog! Ronni’s debut picture book is a biography about the life of iconic public figure Jacqueline Bouvier Kennedy Onassis, entitled Jackie and the Books She Loved. Ronni’s book is due out on November 7th by Sky Pony Press, but you can preorder it now. The art, by the talented Bats Langley, is gorgeous and so colorful, but what I think I like best about the book is getting a glimpse into the life of a young Jackie Bouvier, a little girl who loved reading, collecting books, writing and illustrating stories and poems, and animals. There’s so much I can relate to here! And I’m sure kids will too!

Ronni’s answered a few questions for us today about her special book and her writing life. Let’s hear from Ronni!

Congratulations on your fantastic debut picture book Jackie and the Books She Loved, which was beautifully illustrated by Bats Langley! Tell us a bit about the book and what inspired you to write it.

RD: First, I’d like to thank you, Lauri, for having me on Frog On A Blog.

JACKIE AND THE BOOKS SHE LOVED is my debut picture book biography and it truly was a labor of love. Having researched Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis for nearly thirty years, I was fascinated by her love of books and her career as an editor and was inspired to tell her story. The book introduces young readers to an independent and confident Jackie and the idea of how books guided her life. The story paints the portrait of a child captivated by reading and a love of literature and writing—from five-year-old Jackie reading Chekhov stories to a seasoned and confident Jackie at her desk as an editor in the last two decades of her life. Jackie never wrote a memoir but revealed herself in the nearly one hundred books she brought into print. Jackie and the Books She Loved is about the real woman behind this American icon of style and grace brought to life by the lovely artwork of Bats Langley.

Can you reveal one interesting fact you uncovered about Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis while doing research for your book?

RD: I knew a lot about Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis, but I was not surprised to learn that she preferred that the author be the star and insisted on staying in the background. Most readers had no idea that Jackie had acquired and shaped the book they were reading.

How does your experience as a school library media specialist and teacher influence how you write for children?

RD: Because I have read so many books in my more than three decades as a teacher and school library media specialist, I know what good writing looks like, and that can be a little daunting and intimidating. I also realize how important it is to read your work aloud as you write. I want to write something that will spark a child’s imagination. I always had this Einstein quote in my school libraries, “Imagination is more important than knowledge.”

How would you encourage children who aspire to be writers one day?

RD: I have done this as a school library media specialist. I ran writers workshops for students. Now that I am retired, I hope JACKIE AND THE BOOKS SHE LOVED will encourage children to be writers. I am doing an online launch with the Chappaqua Library on November 9th at 7PM. I am working with the children’s librarians to develop a craft kit that will include writing prompts for kids to write poems and stories and make their own little booklet of their writing with strings and ribbons just like Jackie! I will also have activities on my EXTRA page on my website.

Please share one of your favorite classic picture books and one of your favorite recent picture books.

RD: This is the hardest question for a librarian! I will say there are classics like Make Way for Ducklings by Robert McCloskey and Mr. Rabbit and the Lovely Present by Charlotte Zolotow that I think should be read to every child. Dominic by William Steig is one of my very favorite children’s books that I recommend to adults as well as children. It’s a brilliant book about life that I’ve read many times.  The Boy Who Loved Words by Roni Schotter is a more recent beautifully written picture book. And for a recent picture book biography, a mentor text of mine is On the Wings of Words: The Extraordinary Life of Emily Dickinson by Jennifer Berne. I’m also loving the brand new pb bio by Lisa Rogers Beautiful Noise: The Music of John Cage.

What are you working on now, another biography perhaps?

RD: I have always loved interviewing people as a journalist, so it should come as no surprise to you that I am working on a biography even though people are always asking me to write about my dog, Maggie Mae!

Photo credit: Randi Childs

Ronni Diamondstein spent her life surrounded by books and immersed in the world of children’s literature. An avid reader since childhood, libraries, books, and writing are her life’s work. As a school library media specialist and teacher of gifted and talented students in the United States and abroad, Ronni nurtured her students’ creativity by sharing her love of reading with them.

Ronni is a graduate of Syracuse University. She attended Bread Loaf Writers Conference and led writing workshops and open mics to encourage people of all ages to tell their stories. Ronni served on the Board of the Chappaqua Children’s Book Festival and is a past President of the Chappaqua Library Board of Trustees. Jackie and the Books She Loved is her debut picture book. Ronni lives in Chappaqua, New York, with her toy poodle, Maggie Mae. 

To connect with Ronni and learn more about her book, visit her website and follow her on social media:

Website- www.ronnidiamondstein.com

Facebook- Ronni Diamondstein

Instagram @maggiemaepupreporter 

Twitter @MaggieMae10514

Threads @maggiemaepupreporter

Post @ronnidiamondstein

Bluesky @ronnidiamondstein.bsky.social

Stories That Remind Kids Your Difference May Be What The World Is Waiting For by Nancy Churnin

I realized recently that I don’t feature nonfiction picture books or picture book biographies as often as I do fiction picture books here on the Frog. I have a pretty good excuse. Fiction picture books are what I mostly write and, therefore, what I mostly read. So, it makes sense that fiction is what I would mostly share.

But that doesn’t mean there aren’t tons of spectacular and inspiring nonfiction picture books, including biographies, out there. Today, I’m thrilled to welcome award winning author Nancy Churnin! Her wonderful books are all about “outsiders, people that the kids don’t know that I hope will inspire them — people who are different or think differently and find that it’s their different experience or different way of thinking that helps them achieve their dreams and make the world a better place for others.”

Read on for more on this important topic and to meet the inspirational people in Nancy’s books!

Stories That Remind Kids Your Difference May Be What The World Is Waiting For

by Nancy Churnin

After selling eight picture book biographies – six published, two due out in 2020 – it strikes me that the common experience all these diverse subjects share is that they felt different, which leaves them at the start of their journey feeling as if they don’t belong.

Ultimately, through their journey they learn that their difference is their strength – the gift that they bring to the world that makes it more inclusive, that opens the door for others and, ultimately, makes their lives and everyone else’s better.

Nancy at Jones Elementary School

The truth of it is, as I tell kids on school visits, is that we are all different. Some of us (I remember feeling this way) go through periods where we wonder if we are aliens, because we feel as if we’re wired so differently from everyone else.

Even identical twins are not 100% identical. Too often we waste time being self-conscious about those differences – wishing for straight or curly hair, to be bigger or smaller, to have some admired one’s speed, skills, talent in a particular area.

But ultimately, if we embrace rather than agonize over our differences – whether they’re physical or emotional or even a different way of thinking or processing the world – we may find that we have the missing ingredient that the world needs.

In The William Hoy Story, How a Deaf Baseball Player Changed the Game, kids learn about a Deaf child who was told he couldn’t play baseball because he was Deaf and couldn’t hear the umpire’s calls. The key to William’s story is that his Deafness isn’t a disability. In the book, as in life, William is proud of being Deaf.

Image from The William Hoy Story, How a Deaf Baseball Player Changed the Game

Ultimately, William gets the idea of teaching the umpires his language, sign language, for safe and out so he can play the game he loves. Sign language helps break down a wall between the Deaf and the hearing and it makes the game better for everyone because now, even the farthest member of the crowd can see the signs.

It gives me an excuse to teach kids a few simple signs, too, which is always a hit.

In Manjhi Moves a Mountain, we have an ordinary laborer, who sees things differently and is willing to act on his vision to make it come true. Where his neighbors see an impenetrable 300-foot mountain between them and the well-to-do village where there is a school, doctors, work in the fields and markets for food, he envisions a road that cuts through the mountain, making the path easier for everyone.

Image from Manjhi Moves a Mountain

People laugh at him when he trades his only possessions, three goats, for a worn hammer and chisel and starts chiseling the mountain. Twenty-two years later, when the path is completed, they recognize and applaud his heroism, while children see how important it is to hold fast to your dreams and persist in pursuing them even if others tell you they’re unattainable.

Like William Hoy and Manjhi, Charlie Sifford, the hero of Charlie Takes His Shot, How Charlie Sifford Broke the Color Barrier in Golf, has an unlikely dream. Charlie grows up in the segregated America of the 1930s-1950s where African Americans were not allowed to play on the PGA Tour. The color of his skin makes him different among golfers. At the same time he knows that he has the opportunity, if he persists, to open the door to make the game possible for everyone to play just as his friend, Jackie Robinson did for everyone who wanted to play Major League Baseball.

Image from Charlie Takes His Shot, How Charlie Sifford Broke the Color Barrier in Golf

Later, in the back matter, kids will learn that Charlie Sifford was the one who opened the door that golf superstar Tiger Woods walked through. I also like to share with kids that Tiger Woods named one of his children Charlie in his honor.

In Irving Berlin, the Immigrant Boy Who Made America Sing, Irving Berlin didn’t excel at school. But he had the unusual ability to process the world through sounds. And nothing could stop him from writing the music he heard in his head and pounded in his heart. He was an immigrant, he grew up in poverty and he never learned to read music. He taught himself to pick out tunes on an old piano. Later, he hired a pianist to write the notes for the music in his head.

Image from Irving Berlin, the Immigrant Boy Who Made America Sing

He used his gifts not only to enrich America musically, by creating songs we still love today, but by dedicating royalties of “God Bless America” to the children of his beloved country by designating them for the Boy and Girl Scouts of America.

Charlotte of The Queen and the First Christmas Tree was a queen, but what I emphasize in the book is how she was a royal who was different from other royals. She didn’t like dressing up or going to fancy balls. Instead, she loved taking care of children and helping her garden grow. She not only became the first royal who made charitable giving part of royal duties, she introduced the first Christmas tree to England in an effort to delight 100 children attending a party at Windsor Castle in 1800.

Image from The Queen and the First Christmas Tree

And now, my new book, Martin & Anne, the Kindred Spirits of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. and Anne Frank, tells the parallel stories of two people of different genders, races, religions and countries who were born in the same year, 1929, and whose hearts beat with the same hope for a better, kinder world where “all babies would be seen as beautiful. As all babies are.”

Both Martin and Anne lived in a world filled with hate, anger, fear and unfairness, but they had a different view of what the world could be. They used their words to articulate a vision of love and opportunity for all. And while both were taken from us before their time, in this year, which would have marked their 90th birthdays, their words, vision and heart continue to inspire.

Image from Martin & Anne, the Kindred Spirits of Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. and Anne Frank

It’s my hope that kids who feel different, who worry that no one gets them, who feel like outsiders, will find kindred spirits in these books that celebrate our differences as the very thing that propel humans as a group further along in our journey toward the light.


Nancy Churnin is the author of eight picture book biographies, including The William Hoy Story, on several state reading lists; Irving Berlin, a Sydney Taylor Notable, Manjhi Moves a Mountain, a 2018 South Asia Book Award and Anne Izard Storytellers Choice winner, plus two Social Studies Notables, two Silver Eureka Award winners, a Mighty Girl listing and more. The former theater critic for The Dallas Morning News and Los Angeles Times San Diego Edition, she’s now a full-time children’s book author and peace negotiator between her dog and cats. A member of the Nonfiction Ninjas, SCBWI and 12X12, she lives in North Texas.

For more about Nancy Churnin and her books, visit:

Facebook: Nancy Churnin Children’s Books
Twitter: @nchurnin
http://www.nancychurnin.com

And look for Beautiful Shades of Brown, the Art of Laura Wheeler Waring coming in February 2020!

Image from Beautiful Shades of Brown, the Art of Laura Wheeler Waring

Nancy, thank you so much for stopping by Frog on a Blog! Not only are your books inspiring for young readers, but you, too, are an inspiration to children’s book authors, like me!