Showing posts with label award finalists. Show all posts
Showing posts with label award finalists. Show all posts

Wednesday, January 30, 2013

LibrariYAn's Take: ALA Youth Media Awards Winners!

While I wasn't able to be in Seattle for all the glory, I did get to watch the livestream of the ALA Youth Media Awards with the assistant librarian and my intern whilst chowing down on some delicious orange cookies and lady grey tea.  By now you've probably seen the list of books that received honors and awards during Monday's ALA Youth Media Awards.   So I'm not going to bother re-listing them here for you.  Instead, I'm just going to share some of my reactions (in the order listed on the ALA press release):

Newbery: Yay!  I've read and loved all of these books!  This has never happened to me before.  I sobbed my way through Ivan, thought Splendors & Glooms was so sensual (in the appealing to the senses way, so get your head out of the gutter!), have an ongoing obsession with Bomb, and (just in the nick of time!) really loved the characters in Three Times Lucky. I wish Wonder had gotten some love because the structure and the story and the characters and man, I just really liked it.

Caldecott: I haven't read most of these.  I wasn't as enamored with This is Not My Hat as everyone else was, and can't say I read any of the others.  But picture books aren't really my jam.

Coretta Scott King (Author): I bought Hand in Hand for our library, but haven't read it yet. Oops.  Each Kindness was like a modern 100 Dresses (that's a strongly favorable comparison) and No Crystal Stair was impressive to me both in format and content.  I wish Pinned had gotten some love because the characters were so well-written and I loved how Autumn chased Adonis and they defied stereotypes.

Coretta Scott King (Illustrator): The only one of these I've even seen is Kadir Nelson's I Have a Dream.  It is done in his usual illustration style.  And it is beautiful.  And inspiring.

Printz: I knew that The Fault in Our Stars wasn't a lock.  I know some people just don't like John Green or his books.  And I know people feel like he already gets too much praise.  So I figured it would be snubbed.  But FIOS was the best YA book I've ever read.  To say I am disappointed is an understatement.  To each his/her own.  I'd seen In Darkness on one "best of 2012" list, but didn't bother to read it because so many other titles were on multiple lists.  There was buzz about Aristotle & Dante, but to the point that I figured it worth reading (don't worry, I've already ordered a copy).  My love for Code Name Verity has already been professed. I'd never even heard of White Bicycle.  Now that I have, I've ordered it and the two companion novels.

Schneider: Hadn't heard of any of the titles.  Went ahead and ordered A Dog Called Homeless and Somebody, Please Tell Me Who I Am for the MS library.

Alex: I'd heard good buzz about Dahmer and Bernadette, but haven't read anything on this list. Alex titles tend to wind up on my personal summer reading list (aka the only time - other than book club - where I read adult books).

Carnegie: Cool! A movie about condors!

Coretta Scott King - Virginia Hamilton: Demetria Tucker sounds like a great lady!

Margaret A. Edwards: Yeah, I've never read a Tamora Pierce book.  But I should.

Arbothnot Lecture: Hooray for you, Andrea Davis Pinkney!

Batchelder: I want international titles to be my jam.  But they aren't...yet.  So much catching up to do. I purchased My Family for the War and A Game for Swallows immediately.  We already had Son of a Gun, but now I need to read it.

Pura Belpre (Illustrator): Congrats to you, David Diaz!

Pura Belpre (Author): Okay, I get it.  I need to read Aristotle & Dante.  And I need to finish Evelyn Serrano.  It's on my night stand.

Sibert: Bomb is the bomb! Haven't read Ben.  Happy to see Moonbird and Titanic getting honor love here, since I feel like sometimes books for middle schoolers get shut out in favor of middle grade books on the ALSC level and older young adult fare on the YALSA level.

Stonewall: Yup, Aristotle & Dante.  My ordered book arrives tomorrow.  I will read it right away! Graphic novel love to Drama (which is circ-ing non-stop at my school).  Gone, Gone, Gone is new to me. I'd heard October Mourning wasn't good enough and that people had hoped for more.  Guess the committee didn't feel that way.  I recognized the cover for Sparks, but hadn't heard anything about it.  No Cameron Post? Why?  Was the 90s connection I had to the book making me unable to see its weaknesses?

Geisel: Mo Willems always wins or is honored in this category.

Morris: Fantasy finally breaks into this year's awards with debut author Rachel Hartman's Seraphina! Yay! I'd read only two of the other honor books (Cameron Post and Perishable Items), but Seraphina was also my pick.

ENYA: Bomb diggity! This was the most exciting award for me this year, because all of the finalists were great.  2012 was a great year for nonfiction, and any of the honor books would have been great choices.  But I loved Bomb the best.  Yay!

Phew!  Is anyone still reading?  Probably not.  Comment with your favorite of the winners/honors and/or the book you think was robbed to show me actually read this far.  Maybe I'll reward you with some ARCs I've got.

The LibrariYAn is an Amazon Associate. If you click from links on this blog to Amazon and buy something (anything!), I receive a small percentage of the purchase price.

Monday, January 28, 2013

Nonfiction Monday: Youth Media Awards Winners!

Nonfiction Monday is a weekly meme in the Kidlitosphere that invites bloggers to read and review a nonfiction book on Monday as a way to promote high-quality nonfiction titles.  Each week, a different blogger "hosts" Nonfiction Monday and provides a roundup of all the posts.  This week Nonfiction Monday is hosted by laurasalas: writing the world for kids.



Just minutes ago, the winners of the Youth Media Awards were announced to an auditorium of children's and young adult librarians at the ALA Mid-Winter Conference in Seattle, WA.  Awards were given for fiction and nonfiction titles (I'll post later with my thoughts on the fiction honors and winners), but right now I want to focus on the facts!

Today is a BIG day for children's and young adult literature.  This is especially true for Bomb: The Race to Build--and Steal--the World's Most Dangerous Weapon, which won not only the YALSA Excellence in Nonfiction for Young Adults Award, but also the Robert F. Sibert Informational Book Medal AND was a John Newbery Honor Book!

Here's how it broke down for the nonfiction awards:

YALSA Award for Excellence in Nonfiction for Young Adults (which I've seen at least once referred to as the "ENYA")

Winner:



Honors:







Robert F. Sibert Informational Book Medal

Winner:



Honors:






And there you have it, folks!  Our nonfiction Youth Media Awards winners!  A shout out also to Moonbird and Titanic, which received honors for ENYA and Sibert.  2012 was a good year for nonfiction.

Stay tuned for my recap on the fiction titles!

The LibrariYAn is an Amazon Associate. If you click from links on this blog to Amazon and buy something (anything!), I receive a small percentage of the purchase price.

Thursday, December 6, 2012

YALSA Morris Award Finalists...

...for debut YA novel have been announced!  Check 'em out at the YALSA website.

The winner will be announced at the Youth Media Awards on Tuesday, January 28th at ALA Midwinter in Seattle.  Stay tuned!

The only one I've read is The Miseducation of Cameron Post.  Seraphina and Love and Other Perishable Items were already on my TBR list.  Time to add Wonder Show and After the Snow!

The LibrariYAn is an Amazon Associate. If you click from links on this blog to Amazon and buy something (anything!), I receive a small percentage of the purchase price.

Tuesday, December 4, 2012

YALSA Award for Excellence in Nonfiction: 2013 Finalists!

Wahoo!  Today (at least, I think it happened today) YALSA announced the finalists for the 2013 YALSA Award for Excellence in Nonfiction!

And they are...




Titanic: Voices From the Disaster by Deborah Hopkinson

Bomb: The Race to Build--and Steal--the World's Most Dangerous Weapon by Steve Sheinkin

Moonbird: A Year on the Wind with the Great Survivor B95 by Phillip Hoose

Steve Jobs: The Man Who Thought Different by Karen Blumenthal

We've Got a Job: The 1963 Birmingham Children's March by Cynthia Levinson

What a strong list of finalists.  It really was a good year for nonfiction.  I read and enjoyed all of these titles, but I think I probably like Bomb the best, as you could probably tell from my gushing review.  And of course, seeing the finalist list reminds me that I have some good books to review for upcoming Nonfiction Mondays.

The LibrariYAn is an Amazon Associate. If you click from links on this blog to Amazon and buy something (anything!), I receive a small percentage of the purchase price.