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Viewing: Blog Posts Tagged with: Michael Cart, Most Recent at Top [Help]
Results 1 - 5 of 5
1. Don Tate & Phoebe Wahl Win Ezra Jack Keats Book Award

By The Ezra Jack Keats Foundation
from Cynthia Leitich Smith's Cynsations

The Ezra Jack Keats Foundation, in partnership with the de Grummond Children’s Literature Collection at The University of Southern Mississippi, announced the winners of the 30th annual Ezra Jack Keats Book Award.

Each year, a new writer and new illustrator are celebrated. The 2016 award ceremony will be held April 7 during the Fay B. Kaigler Children’s Book Festival at The University of Southern Mississippi in Hattiesburg. The winners receive a gold medallion as well as an honorarium of $1,000.

“We are proud to present the Ezra Jack Keats Book Award to the best new talents in children’s illustrated literature each year. These are writers and illustrators whose books reflect the spirit of Keats, and at the same time, are refreshingly original,” said Deborah Pope, Executive Director of the Ezra Jack Keats Foundation. “This year is Ezra’s 100th birthday! So we are especially delighted to celebrate him by honoring those whose books, like his, are wonderful to read and look at and reflect our multicultural world.”

“The Keats Archives at the de Grummond Children’s Collection is a happy reminder of the joy that Ezra’s books have brought to readers and the impact they have had on children’s book makers.

"Once again, we see that influence in the work of this year’s EJK Book Award winners. We are confident that they’ll join the long list of illustrious past winners whose books continue to delight and make a difference,” said Ellen Ruffin, Curator of the de Grummond Children’s Literature Collection.

Lois Lowry, two-time winner of the Newbery Award for Number the Stars (1990) and The Giver (1994), will present this year’s Ezra Jack Keats Book Awards. Michael Cart, columnist/reviewer for Booklist and a leading expert on young adult literature, will deliver the Keats Lecture.

The 2016 Ezra Jack Keats Book Award winner for new writer is:

Don Tate for Poet: The Remarkable Story of George Moses Horton (Peachtree)

In the South before the Civil War, it was illegal to teach slaves to read, but George Moses Horton loved words too much to be stopped. He taught himself to read as a child and grew up to be a published poet, while still a slave.

Writing about slavery for young readers is challenging but important, and Don Tate succeeds brilliantly, in an engaging, age-appropriate and true narrative.

Tate said, “Three years ago, I won an Ezra Jack Keats honor award, one of the proudest moments of my career. I never imagined being considered again… this time [for] the top award. There has always been a special place in my heart for Ezra Jack Keats. When he chose to picture brown children in his books, he chose to acknowledge me. I wasn’t invisible to him.

"As a creator of color in a field that sorely lacks diversity, it can be easy to sometimes feel unseen. This award serves as a reminder to me that I am not invisible and that my work matters.”

The 2016 Ezra Jack Keats Book Award winner for new illustrator is:

Phoebe Wahl for Sonya’s Chickens (Tundra)

Sonya’s dad presents her with three baby chicks to care for, and she does her job well, providing food, shelter and lots of love as they grow into hens. Then one night, Sonya discovers that one of her hens is missing! But as her father explains, the fox stole the hen because he loved his kits and needed to feed them.

The circle of life is gently and exquisitely depicted in Wahl’s rich and colorful watercolor and collage illustrations of a multicultural family’s life on a farm.

Wahl said, “Keats’ work stands out as some of the most impactful of my childhood. I can directly trace the roots of my obsession with pattern, color and my use of collage to my affinity with the lacy baby blanket in Peter’s Chair. Keats inspired me to create stories that are quiet and gentle, yet honor the rich inner lives of children and all of the complexity that allows.

"I am humbled to be associated with Keats’ legacy in being presented with this award, and I am so grateful to the Ezra Jack Keats Foundation and the children’s literature community for this show of support and encouragement.”

The 2016 Ezra Jack Keats Book Award honor winners are:

2016 New Writer Honors


Julia Sarcone-Roach for The Bear Ate Your Sandwich, also illustrated by Sarcone-Roach (Knopf)


Megan Dowd Lambert for A Crow of His Own, illustrated by David Hyde Costello (Charlesbridge)

2016 New Illustrator Honors


Ryan T. Higgins for Mother Bruce, also written by Higgins (Hyperion)


Rowboat Watkins for Rude Cakes, also written by Watkins (Chronicle)

The Ezra Jack Keats Book Award Criteria

To be eligible for the 2016 Ezra Jack Keats Book Award, the author and/or illustrator will have no more than three children’s picture books published prior to the year under consideration.

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2. Cover Unveiled For The 10th Anniversary Edition of ‘Looking For Alaska’

Looking For Alaska 10th Anniversary

Young adult novelist John Green has revealed the new cover for the 10th anniversary edition of Looking For Alaska. We’ve embedded the full image, designed by artist Rodrigo Corral, above—what do you think?

According to the press release, this special edition features an “introduction by John Green, looking back at Looking For Alaska ten years later, essay by Michael Cart, Chair of the 2006 Printz committee, deleted scenes, and extensive Q&A from John Green answering fans favorite questions, the book will offer more for readers than ever before.” Penguin Young Readers Group has scheduled a release date for 2015.

New Career Opportunities Daily: The best jobs in media.

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3. YALSA Podcast #74 Words in Your Ear: Conversations with Young Adult Authors - Lizzie Skurnick

In this podcast, Michael Cart interviews Lizzie Skurnick author of the just released Shelf Discovery: The Teen Classics we Never Stopped Reading. Lizzie is also the author of the blog Old Hag and is a columnist for Jezebel.

Listen

You can also subscribe to YALSA’s podcasts.

The podcast discussion covers:

  • Shelf Discovery
  • The range of human experience covered in teen novels.
  • How teens read and what they get out of reading realistic fiction.
  • Books including Secret Lives by Bertha Amos, Jacob Have I Loved, Phyllis Reynold Naylor’s Alice series, and The Dreadful Future of Blossom Culp.
  • Reasons why novels for girls and women do not receive the respect they deserve.
  • Skurnick’s career & the readership of her Jezebel columns.
  • The future of print reviewing and the changing world of reading in electronic and print formats.

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4. YALSA Podcast #72 Words in Your Ear: Conversations with Young Adult Authors - Margo Rabb

Michael Cart interviews Margo Rabb author of Cures for Heartbreak and The Missing Persons series.
Listen
The conversation includes discussion of:

  • Rabb’s New York Times essay, I’m Y.A. and I’m O.K. on the cross-over in books between teen and adult.
  • Short stories for teens and novels written in short story format.
  • The challenges of writing fiction and writing autobiographical fiction.
  • The definition and re-definition of young adult literature.
  • Literary novels for young adults.
  • Adult and teen cross-shelving of materials in bookstores and libraries.

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5. In the Stacks: Short Stories About Libraries and Librarians - ed. Michael Cart

I picked up In the Stacks: Short Stories About Libraries and Librarians, a short story collection edited by Michael Cart last week in the library, when I was looking for Tove Jansson's A Winter Book, which, being a short story collection, I was looking for amongst the short story volumes. I found both books and brought the Cart collection home with some curiosity.

This is an anthology of short stories in defence of libraries, librarians and reading by some great storytellers, including Italo Calvino, Alice Munro, Ursula Le Guin, Jorge Luis Borges, and H H Munro (better known as Saki).

My favourite stories were:

Italo Calvino's "A General in the Library" which begins:

One day, in the illustrious nation of Panduria, a suspicion crept into the minds of top officials: that books contained opinions hostile to military prestige. In fact trials and enquiries had revealed that the tendency, now so widespread, of thinking of general s as people actually capable of making mistakes and causing catastrophes, and of wars as things that did not always amount to splendid cavalry charges towards a glorious destiny, was shared by a large number of books, ancient and modern, foreign and Pandurese. (p. 13)


If you're not hooked by that first paragraph, then it's probable that you've not been following world news. Can the books reform Panduria ? Well no, this story is too realistic for that, but the long-suffering, ever-dutiful and very clever librarian, Signor Crispino, does succeed in acquiring a number of new patrons at the library as a result of the investigation, whilst the military loses several officers.

Walter R Brooks' "Ed Has His Mind Improved": Ed the horse has learned to read, but when his owner, Mr. Pope, leaves town for ten days, Mrs. Pope has all the books that were kept in the barn for him returned to the library. Ed simply can't bear the idea of being without reading material for 10 days, so he heads off to the public library on his own. His thirst for literature is supported by the librarian, Miss Sigsbee, but is less popular with the library's Trustees !

Ray Bradbury's "Exchange" may be too sentimental for some readers, although I found it touching. This story records a conversation between an elderly female librarian and a former library patron, who's now an Army officer. Here are a few of their lines:

"Don't mind me, Miss Adams. You smell new books? ... Like fresh bread when you're hungry."
"Was I lot of trouble?" "Yes ... a fiend ... But I loved you."
" ... when I was a boy I used to look up and see you behind your desk, so near but far away, and ... I used to think that you were Mrs. God, and that the library was a whole world."
"Most libraries today, too much light. There should be shadows, don't you think? ... So that late nights the beasts can prowl out of the stacks and crouch by this jungle light to turn the pages with their breath."

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