Can A Book Talk Back? Annette Bay Pimentel on Metafiction, Pooh, and Picture Books Ep. 24
What happens when a nonfiction picture book refuses to stay in its lane?
In this episode of Nonfiction Kidlit Craft Conversations, I talk with Annette Bay Pimentel about her inventive new picture book, How a Bear Became a Book, illustrated by Faith Pray.
Together, we explore:
📚 Rule-breaking nonfiction
🧸 The collaboration behind Winnie-the-Pooh
🎨 How words and pictures work together in picture books
✍️ Metafiction and informational fiction in children’s literature
🔍 Researching book history and literary archives
💡 Why critique groups matter for nonfiction writers
🖼️ The creative partnership between authors and illustrators
Annette shares how this book evolved from a traditional nonfiction biography into an innovative, layered exploration of storytelling itself — complete with a talking Winnie-the-Pooh narrator. We also discuss the creative risks involved in blending nonfiction, metafiction, and picture book craft while staying true to young readers.
Whether you’re a children’s author, illustrator, educator, librarian, or nonfiction fan, this conversation is packed with insight into the creative process behind groundbreaking nonfiction picture books.
Chapters:
00:00 Introduction: When Nonfiction Breaks the Rules
00:58 Meet Annette Bay Pimentel and How a Bear Became a Book
02:45 How the Winnie-the-Pooh Story Idea Began
05:04 The Draft That Changed Everything: Letting Pooh Speak
08:53 Why Critique Groups Matter for Writers
11:00 Collaboration, E.H. Shepard, and the Making of Winnie-the-Pooh
16:00 Informational Fiction, Metafiction, and “Playing Fair” with Readers
20:00 Picture Book Design, Research, and the History of Illustrated Books
27:00 Faith Pray’s Illustrations and Solving an “Unillustratable” Manuscript
37:49 Back Matter, School Visits, and What Creators Can Learn from Collaboration
Books and creators discussed include:
• How a Bear Became a Book
• A. A. Milne
• E. H. Shepard
• Finding Winnie
• Winnie: The True Story of the Bear Who Inspired Winnie-the-Pooh
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