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Interview with Author Rajani LaRocca

Authors, Debut Interviews, InterviewsLindsay Ward9 Comments

Happy Thursday Critters! I hope you are all doing well— staying healthy and safe. Today we have an interview with debut picture book author Rajani LaRocca! Although this is Rajani’s first picture book, her debut book, a middle grade novel, MIDSUMMER’S MAYHEM, came out last summer and received rave reviews, a starred Kirkus review, and was on many ‘best of 2019’ lists! Rajani’s debut picture book, SEVEN GOLDEN RINGS: A TALE OF MUSIC AND MATH, illustrated by Archana Sreenivasan, comes out with Lee & Low Books on October 20, 2020! Make sure to pre-order this one!

Here is the description of the book:

In this clever, convivial picture book, an Indian boy untangles a mathematical conundrum to win a place at the Rajah's court.

In ancient India, a boy named Bhagat travels to the Rajah's city, hoping to ensure his family's prosperity by winning a place at court as a singer. Bhagat carries his family's entire fortune--a single coin and a chain of seven golden rings--to pay for his lodging. But when the innkeeper demands one ring per night, and every link snipped costs one coin, how can Bhagat both break the chain and avoid overpaying? His inventive solution points the way to an unexpected triumph, and offers readers a friendly lesson in binary numbers--the root of all computing.

How wonderful does this book sound?! The story and art are fantastic! I’m so excited to be sharing Rajani’s work with you all today.

So without further ado, please welcome Rajani Larocca!

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Where do you live?

I live in the beautiful (and literary) town of Concord, MA.

 When did you know you wanted to write picture books?

When I started writing a few years ago, I didn’t intend to write picture books. I saw myself as a novelist. But then I took a workshop on different types of children’s literature at Grub Street, a creative writing center in Boston, where the instructor showed us some mind-blowing picture books, including The Jupiter Stone by Owen Paul Lewis. That book, and the intersection of words and pictures, blew my mind, and inspired me to write my very first picture book. I went on to write many more, and each one has brought its own special joy…including my debut picture book, SEVEN GOLDEN RINGS.

 Tell us about your road to publication. What did that involve for you?

I’ve always loved books but spent a very long time away from writing while I went to medical school, residency, and started working as a physician. A few years ago, when my children were in school and I was established in my medical practice, I started taking writing classes online and in person. In about 2013, I got more serious about pursuing publication. After writing four to five picture books I thought were “ready,” I first started querying agents in 2015. I had some close calls but no offers, and in the meantime, I revised a middle grade novel and started querying it in 2017. When I received offers of representation, I also shared five picture books with the agents and got their feedback. I signed with my wonderful agent, Brent Taylor of Triada US, in November 2017. The past couple of years have been incredible, and I now have five picture books coming between 2020-2022!

 What do you do to shake the rust off or get new ideas?

I feel like ideas are all around me if I allow myself to be open to them. Participating in Storystorm is super helpful to generate new ideas, and I sometimes jot notes in my phone when inspiration strikes. The idea for a book may come in the form of an image, a title, or a memory. I’m always inspired by my children and our sweet little dog. In fact, taking a walk in nature, especially with my dog, often gets the creative juices flowing.

 Tell us about your debut book.

SEVEN GOLDEN RINGS is set in ancient India and tells the story of a boy named Bhagat who wants to save his family from poverty by earning a place at the Rajah’s court as a singer. He travels to the Rajah’s city with all the wealth he and his mother have left in the world: a single coin and seven tiny golden rings. But when he gets to an inn, and the innkeeper demands one ring per night and breaking a ring costs one coin, Bhagat must figure out a way to stay in the city while not wasting any of the rings. Bhagat succeeds in solving this mathematical conundrum, and the story introduces the concept of binary numbers—the basis of how computers work—in a fun and accessible way.

Interior Art from SEVEN GOLDEN RINGS: A TALE OF MUSIC AND MATH, written by Rajani Larocca!, illustrated by Archana Sreenivasan

Interior Art from SEVEN GOLDEN RINGS: A TALE OF MUSIC AND MATH, written by Rajani Larocca!, illustrated by Archana Sreenivasan

 And last but not least, your favorite 80s movie?

THE EMPIRE STRIKES BACK!


Huge thank you to Rajani for stopping by Critter Lit today! Congrats on all your success! We can’t wait to see what story you share with us next.


RAJANI LAROCCA was born in India, raised in Kentucky, and now lives in the Boston area with her wonderful family and impossibly cute dog. After graduating from Harvard College and Harvard Medical School, she spends her time writing novels and picture books, practicing medicine, and baking too many sweet treats. Her middle grade debut, Midsummer’s Mayhem (Yellow Jacket/Little Bee Books 2019), is an Indian-American middle grade mashup of A Midsummer Night’s Dream and competitive baking. Her debut picture book, Seven Golden Rings (Lee & Low, 2020) introduces binary numbers through a story set in ancient India. She is also the author of Bracelets for Brothers (Charlesbridge, 2021), I’ll Go and Come Back (Candlewick, 2022), Where Three Oceans Meet (Abrams, 2022), and other forthcoming books.

For more information on Rajani, visit her online at www.rajanilarocca.com or follow her on social media:

Twitter and IG: @rajanilarocca, Facebook

BUY THIS BOOK To pre-order a copy of Rajani’s debut picture book, click here.

WIN A COPY! Want to win a copy of SEVEN GOLDEN RINGS: A TALE OF MUSIC AND MATH?! Leave a COMMENT below or RETWEET this post on Twitter. One lucky winner will be announced on Thursday, July 9th! US addresses only please.

Interview with Debut Author and Illustrator and Husband and Wife Team Megan and Jorge Lacera

Authors + Illustrators, Authors, Debut Interviews, Illustrators, InterviewsLindsay Ward7 Comments

Happy Thursday Critters! Today, we have an interview with debut author and illustrator Megan and Jorge Lacera! A husband and wife team, their debut picture book, ZOMBIES DON’T EAT VEGGIES!, released this week in both English and Spanish! I’m thrilled to share their work with you today!

So without further ado…please welcome Megan and Jorge Lacera!

Where do you live?

Our home is Cypress, Texas, y’all—a suburb of Houston. 

When did you know you wanted to write/illustrate picture books?

Collaborating has always been our jam. We met while we were both working in the kids’ entertainment studio at American Greetings in Cleveland, Ohio. It didn’t take long for us to realize that we both love everything about stories—reading them, watching them, critiquing them, arguing over them! Creating stories together is magical.

Once we got married, we started thinking more about picture books. We loved that we could create something from beginning to end and execute the full vision that we collectively dreamed up. Super appealing.

After Jorge attended a week-long illustration seminar with faculty that included amazing creators like Adam Rex, James Gurney, and Rebecca Leveille Guay, we were both inspired and excited so we started to really go for it. Our first attempts didn’t exactly come together (re: they were a mess), but we kept evolving. When a little zombie kid character named Mo shambled his way into Megan’s brain, we knew we were onto something that we couldn’t let go.   

Tell us about your road to publication, what did that involve for you?

We put a ton of time and energy into learning and sharpening our craft. Years. We attended local and national SCBWI conferences. Read countless books, studied their structures and forms. Founded a critique group that was very focused on achieving publication-level work. Completed a seminar with Mira Reisberg’s Children’s Book Academy. Made dummies, critiqued the heck out of them, threw them out, started over.

After all that we felt confident in querying agents. We’re now represented by John Cusick at Folio Jr. (he’s awesome!). ZOMBIES wasn’t on submission all that long before the offer from Lee and Low came in. We absolutely love Lee and Low and have so much respect for their integrity and dedication to multicultural stories and creators. Editor Jessica Echeverria’s offer letter was unbelievable….she got EVERYTHING we were going for with ZOMBIES and more. Perhaps cliché, but collaborating with Jessica and Lee and Low feels meant to be.

From signing the deal to the book’s release, two years have passed. Much of that time has been on revising, revising, revising. Some days were challenging, but holding the final book in our hands is totally worth it!

Can you tell us about how you work together as a husband and wife team? 

Usually when we tell people that we work together they look totally mystified. “On purpose?!?” they ask.

Yep. We really do love working together. 

We work at home. After we get our son off to school, we talk over coffee and breakfast. Usually that includes some debate over the latest news stories or a movie we watched the night before. But there’s also a review of our goals for the day, ways to divide up the work, reminders of our big vision and where we’re headed. In addition to our books, we also consult and freelance for companies together—so there are those projects that require collaboration and sometimes quite a bit of negotiation on how it will all get done on time.

The day from there depends on where we are in the process. At the concept stage of a book, we’re together a lot….sketching out ideas, outlining a plot, building art reference, watching movie clips. Once we’re on the same page, we both go off separately; Megan to write the manuscript, Jorge to draw. Then we come back together to review and critique everything we’ve both done. 

People often want to know if we argue. Of course we do! Part of we’ve learned while collaborating at companies is how important healthy disagreement and creative conflict are to the process. Ideas and stories get better when you can push each other to go even further. Respectfully, while keeping your focus on the work. We welcome the “conflict” now because we know it means there’s room to grow…our standards are pretty high and holding each other accountable to those standards is key to our process.

What do you do to shake the rust off or get new ideas?

Consistent exercise is really important to both of us. Jorge does Cross-fit and Megan does hot yoga. Sweat seems to clear space for creative work. We take walks most days and talk about where we’re at with a project or hammer out details of what’s working and what isn’t. 

It isn’t always easy to remember (okay, you might have to drag us kicking and screaming) but taking days off from working to go see a movie, eat Torchy’s Chips and Queso (it’s amazing and totally dangerous), or just do a whole lot of nothing can open up room for ideas and fresh energy. 

Getting new ideas isn’t really an issue; it’s zeroing in on the ones that speak to us most urgently, knocking them around enough to slough off the dust and craggly parts, and then carefully cultivating them into the special somethings that they become.

Anything you can’t live without while you write/draw?

Jorge: I work digitally primarily. I recently made the switch to a Dell Canvas and I’m not sure how I survived before. It’s upped my game and I love it. 

Also, Cuban crackers. Nom, nom.

Megan: My Macbook Air. So not unique, but I love me some coffee while clicking and clacking away. 

Any authors and/or illustrators who inspire you?

Gosh, there are tons. To name just a few…

Adam Rex

Paulo Coelho

Yuyi Morales

Kate DiCamillo

Judy Blume

Peter Brown

Mac Barnett

William Joyce

Tony and Angela DiTerlizzi

Alice and Martin Provensen

Jon Klassen

Dream project to work on?

This is our dream. We loved creating ZOMBIES, we love our current projects, and we really can’t wait to get started on all the stories we have popcorning around in our heads. We’ve been planning for this time in our lives, working day and night to make it happen. So eternally grateful!

Tell us about your debut book.

Mo Romero is a zombie who loves nothing more than growing, cooking, and eating vegetables. Tomatoes? Tantalizing. Peppers? Pure perfection! The problem? Mo's parents insist that their niño eat only zombie cuisine, like arm-panadas and finger foods. They tell Mo over and over that zombies don't eat veggies. But Mo can't imagine a lifetime of just eating zombie food and giving up his veggies. As he questions his own zombie identity, Mo tries his best to convince his parents to give peas a chance.

The Spanish edition ¡Los Zombis No Comen Verduras! is also available and features details exclusive to that edition. Our story has a lot of puns and zombie jokes that wouldn’t work with a straight translation. Yanitzia Canetti adapted ZOMBIES and did a wonderful job!

We hope you’ll love our quirky story about family, self-discovery, and the power of acceptance!

 What’s up next for you?

We signed a two-book deal with Lee and Low Books (their first for picture books!) so we are already working on book #2 (monsters may or may not be involved). We also have several other projects in the works, including more picture books and illustrated middle grade series.

We’ve also created several animated series for kids. One is currently in development…stay tuned for more news on this in the coming months!

And last, but not least, favorite 80s movie?

Megan: A hard choice of epic proportions, but I have to go with The Neverending Story. What I wouldn’t do for a luck dragon like Falcor!

Jorge: Impossible to pick just one. Okay, fine! Monster Squad.


Huge thank you to Megan and Jorge for stopping by Critter Lit today! Congrats on your wonderful new book, we can’t wait to see all your upcoming projects!


JORGE LACERA was born in Colombia, and grew up in Miami, Florida, drawing in sketchbooks, on napkins, on walls, and anywhere his parents would let him. After graduating with honors from Ringling College of Art and Design, Jorge worked as a visual development and concept artist for companies like American Greetings and Irrational Games. As a big fan of pop culture, comics, and zombie movies, Jorge rarely saw Latino kids as the heroes or leads. He is committed to changing that, especially now that he has a son. 

MEGAN LACERA grew up in the suburbs of Cleveland, Ohio, with a book always in her hands. She became a writer and creator of characters and worlds for entertainment companies like American Greetings, GoldieBlox, and Hasbro, and later formed her own creative company (Studio Lacera) with husband Jorge Lacera. After reading many stories to their son, Megan realized that very few books reflected a family like theirs--multicultural, bilingual, funny, and imperfect. She decided to change that by writing her own stories.

FOR MORE INFORMATION about Megan and Jorge and their work, visit them online here or follow them on social media:

Twitter: @Jlacera @MeganLacera

Instagram: @Jlacera

Facebook: @MeganAndJorgeLacera

LinkedIn: @Jlacera @MeganLacera

TO ORDER Megan and Jorge’s book, ring up your local bookstore or click here.

BOOK GIVEAWAY!

Want a chance to win a copy of ZOMBIES DON’T EAT VEGGIES?! Comment on this post or share it on Twitter. One lucky winner will be selected Thursday, April 11th! US addresses only please.

What's up on deck? Tune in next week for an interview with debut author Cathy Ballou Mealey!