Horn Book

July 3, 2008

The July/August 2008 Horn Book magazine has been published and some of the articles are already available online. The profiles of Newbery and  Caldecott awards winners Brian Selznick and Laura Amy Schlitz will interest Australian readers.


The Shaun Files

July 2, 2008

Unlike Zoe in the previous post, this performance will be happening at the Sydney Opera House - on 20 July. And elsewhere in Sydney, Melbourne and Brisbane, too, throughout the month.

Shaun Tan’s The Red Tree has been realised in performance at last. The Australian Chamber Orchestra and youth choir Gondwana Voices are on tour to those cities with this new production that also has the powerful combination of Shostakovich and The Arrival on the program.  Tour dates and venues here and you can also watch Richard Tognetti talk about the production and view stills from the book.

Shaun’s latest nominations for The Arrival are for two Hugo Awards: Best Related Book and Best Professional Artist. These Science Fiction awards will be presented in Denver, Colorado early next month.


Carnegie Medal

June 27, 2008

After taking the Bronze Medal at the (now defunct) Nestle Awards and being shortlisted for the Booktrust Teenage Prize for Here Lies Arthur, Philip Reeve has at last won a big award -  the 2008 Carnegie Medal, announced in London last night.

Emily Gravett won the Kate Greenaway medal for Little Mouse’s Big Book of Fears. Emily’s technique in the making of this book was rather unorthodox.


Phoenix Award

June 24, 2008

It’s an interesting award, the Phoenix. Its aim is to celebrate a title that missed out on a major prize when it was first published, but with the hindsight of twenty years is reconsidered.

The award is given by the US Children’s Literature Association (ChLA) and named after ‘the fabled bird that rose from its ashes with renewed life and beauty. Phoenix books also rise from the ashes of neglect and obscurity and once again touch the imaginations and enrich the lives of those who read them.’

In 1989, Francesca Lia Block published WeetzieBat. She has just been announced as the winner of the 2009 Phoenix Award for this overlooked title. In 2007, Margaret Mahy received the award for Memory (published 1987) and in 2008, Peter Dickinson for Eva (1988).

A list of some past winners and their acceptance speeches can be found on the Children’s Literature Association wiki. Others can be found on the Phoenix Papers section of the ChLA website, although this is a work in progress and not all links are working.


Boston Globe Horn Book Awards

June 19, 2008

Shaun Tan has been honoured again for The Arrival, with a special citation in the Boston Globe Horn Book Awards announced yesterday. Special citations are rare in these awards, which are among the most prestigious in the US for children’s and young adult literature.

The awards have been presented since 1967. Winners are selected in three categories: Picture Book, Fiction and Poetry, and Nonfiction and two Honor Books may be named in each category.

2008 Winners are:

Fiction and Poetry: The Absolutely True Diary of a Part-Time Indian by Sherman Alexie (this title, available in Australia in September, has won several other awards in the US including a National Book Award.)

Non Fiction: The Wall : Growing Up Behind the Iron Curtain by Peter Sís (to be reviewed in Fiction Focus, Issue 2, 2008)

Picture Book: At Night by Jonathon Bean (a book for young children, not yet available in Australia)

Neither of the two fiction Honor Books is available here yet: Savvy by Ingrid Law will be here in September and Shooting the Moon by Frances O’Roark Dowell has no indicated publishing date for Australia. Both are targeted at an upper primary / lower secondary readership.


Australian Book Industry Awards

June 16, 2008

At the Australian Publishers’ Association annual awards ceremony, held in Melbourne last night, the most glittering prizes of them all went to Geraldine Brooks for her latest novel, People of the Book. Book of the Year and Literary Fiction Book of the Year are two more awards that Geraldine Brooks can add to an already impressive CV that includes the Pulitzer Prize.

John Flanagan not only received the Book of the Year for Older Readers, but the International Success Award for his hugely popular Ranger’s Apprentice series, now being translated into film.

And the awards keep rolling in for Li Cunxin and Anne Spudvilas. The Peasant Prince was named Book of the Year for Younger Readers. Read about Anne’s trip to China with Li and the making of her stunning illustrations on the Papertigers website.


Fuel Your Mind

June 12, 2008

© CBCA – used by CBCA memberBook Week 2008 draws ever closer. CMIS will be interpreting the slogan ‘Fuel Your Mind’ by suggesting that we challenge students to read and respond to literature that might be unusual or a little out of their comfort zone.

The Book Week 2008 pages are still a work in progress, but we have made a start on the lists for Older Readers and the Eve Pownall Award for Information Books.

Logo © CBCA. Used by CBCA Member


ALAN Award to Laurie Halse Anderson

June 12, 2008

ALAN, the Assembly on Literature for Adolescents, has announced the 2008 Award recipient is Laurie Halse Anderson.

This prestigious US award honours someone who has made a significant contribution to young adult literature in whatever capacity, not just writing. In receiving the award, Laurie Halse Anderson is in the company of authors such as Robert Cormier (1982), Madeleine L’Engle (1986), Cynthia Voigt (1989) and Jerry Spinelli (2005).

Anderson’s titles include Speak (2001) - also a Michael L. Printz Honor Book - Catalyst (2002), Fever 1793 (2002) and Prom (2005).


More NZ awards news

June 4, 2008

Having taken out the New Zealand Post YA Book Award in recent weeks with Salt, Maurice Gee is again in the running for a major New Zealand prize - the 2008 Esther Glen Award from LIANZA.

Other finalists for this award, won last year by Bernard Beckett’s Genesis, are:

  • Losing It, by Sandy McKay
  • Smashed, by Mandy Hager
  • The Sea-Wreck Stranger, by Anna Mackenzie
  • The Dumpster Saga, by Craig Harrison
  • Time of the Eagle, by Sherryl Jordan

The winner will be announced in Wellington on August 18.


Red House Awards

June 1, 2008

A Bentley-driving living skeleton named Skulduggery Pleasant is the unlikely protagonist of the latest book award winner from the UK.

The Red House Children’s Book Awards were announced at the Hay Festival this weekend, and Irish writer Derek Landy’s witty, gothic-horror title was declared overall winner. These children’s choice awards have been running an astonishing 28 years.

Skulduggery seems just as popular in Australia as in the rest of the English-reading world. The sequel, Playing with Fire, has recently become available.