When four children’s book authors decided to hit the road together, they weren’t interested in the typical book tour circuit. No airport terminals and indie bookstore signings. Instead, Amber Miller, Dr. Dawn Menge, Destinee Brown, and Mo Nelson built something that looks more like a community festival than an author appearance.
The Together We Create 4 Kids Tour is what happens when storytellers realize their individual work can go further as a collective effort. Each author brings a different angle to children’s literature. Miller writes the Averee series, focused on confidence, self-love, and positive representation. Dr. Menge’s Queen Vernita’s Educational Series combines education, careers, and global learning. Brown’s Robin Butterflies books help kids process grief and life changes. Nelson teaches emotional intelligence through Mo’s Guide series. Put them together, and you’ve got something that addresses the whole kid, not just one piece.
What makes this tour worth paying attention to is how it’s structured. This isn’t four authors sharing a stage and splitting costs. It’s a deliberate model that treats literacy events like community infrastructure. Each stop includes vendor opportunities for local small businesses, family programming, and educational experiences that stick around after the authors leave town. The goal is to create an ecosystem where books are the entry point, not the entire experience.
The approach comes from a pretty straightforward observation: kids don’t exist in isolation, and neither do their reading habits. Miller, Menge, Brown, and Nelson saw that children’s books could work harder if they were tied to broader community support. So they built a tour that brings literacy, creativity, and economic opportunity into the same space. Local vendors get access to family audiences. Families get educational programming and books that reflect real emotions and experiences. Authors get to collaborate instead of compete.
There’s a business model underneath all this that’s worth understanding. Together We Create 4 Kids operates as a mission-driven collective, not a nonprofit. Revenue from ticket sales, book purchases, sponsorships, and partnerships funds the programming. That means everyone involved gets paid for their work, from authors to speakers to vendors. It’s an intentional choice that reflects how the founders think about sustainability. Community impact shouldn’t rely on unpaid labor or volunteer burnout.

The tour is currently opening vendor opportunities on a rolling basis, though space is limited to maintain quality and mission alignment. The selection process looks for vendors who fit the values of the collective: service-oriented, community-focused, and committed to supporting families. It’s not a free-for-all vendor fair. It’s curated to make sure the experience stays coherent for families who show up.
Each city stop is designed to leave something behind. That might be a literacy activation, a community giveback event, or programming that continues through local schools and homeschool networks. The authors are preparing workshops, panels, and youth-focused experiences that travel with them but adapt to each location. The structure is flexible enough to meet different community needs while maintaining a consistent core mission.
What’s interesting is how the four co-founders talk about their work. They don’t position themselves as individual brands collaborating for convenience. They describe the collective as the primary entity, with each author contributing their expertise to a shared purpose. Miller’s focus on self-worth and positive identity, Menge’s emphasis on education and careers, Brown’s approach to healing, and Nelson’s emotional intelligence framework all feed into a bigger vision: giving kids the tools they need to grow, not just stories to consume.
The books themselves reflect that philosophy. Averee promotes self-worth and positive identity in a way that feels specific, not generic. Queen Vernita introduces careers and cultures through storytelling, not textbook lessons. Robin Butterflies helps children believe in themselves while processing real emotions like grief. Mo’s Guide teaches kids to understand their feelings and make healthy choices. Together, these series address social, emotional, mental, and spiritual development. That’s the “whole child” approach the authors keep mentioning, and it shows up in how they structure their programming.

Together We Create 4 Kids invites collaboration from educators, organizations, sponsors, and partners who want to be part of this model. The collective is rooted in faith, integrity, commitment, and service, which shapes how they operate and who they work with. They’re looking for people and organizations that see literacy as a foundation for confidence and opportunity, not just a checklist item.
The movement is built on the idea that when authors collaborate with purpose, stories become tools for more than entertainment. They become pathways to healing, growth, and generational change. That’s a big claim, but the structure of the tour suggests the authors are serious about proving it. By combining storytelling, education, and service into one experience, they’re testing whether literacy work can function as community infrastructure instead of a nice-to-have extra.
For more information on the tour and vendor opportunities, visit the Together We Create 4 Kids website or read about vendor opportunities for the nationwide tour.





























