Honoring the best in children’s books
Hollywood has its Oscars, TV has its Emmys and American book
publishing has its Newbery and Caldecott Awards--the Holy Grail of
American writers and illustrators of children’s books.
For the best published in 2002, the Newbery went to Avi’s
“Crispin: The Cross of Lead.” In his 50th book, the prolific author
serves up a page-turner that follows the plight of a 13-year-old
peasant boy across 14th-century England. Geared for readers from age
eight through 12, the action-packed narrative delivers a subtle
history lesson embedded into a story laced with period detail.
“Readers experience Crispin’s surroundings through Avi’s sensory
descriptions,” noted Starr LaTronica, chair of the American Library
Assn.’s 2003 Newbery Awards. “In the hands of a superb craftsman,
‘Crispin’ is a fascinating coming-of-age novel that invites [readers]
to consider how life hundreds of years ago echoes our contemporary
search for freedom.”
Five Newbery Honor Books were named: Nancy Farmer’s “The House of
the Scorpion,” Patricia Giff’s “Pictures of Hollis Woods,” Carl
Hiaasen’s “Hoot,” Ann Martin’s “A Corner of the Universe” and
Stephanie Tolan’s “Surviving the Applewhites.”
For best achievement in illustration, the 2003 Caldecott Medal
went to Eric Rohmann for “My Friend Rabbit.” While relishing the
trouble Rabbit stirs up with Mouse’s airplane, preschoolers will
delight in the physical humor of drawings that demand turning and
twisting the book. In a hilarious celebration of friendship,
characters tumble from the page in a dramatic visual romp.
Filling the Caldecott Honor Book roster are Tony Di Terlizzi’s
“The Spider and the Fly,” Peter McCarty’s “Hondo & Fabian” and Jerry
Pinkney’s “Noah’s Ark.”
Also awarded this month were the Coretta Scott King Awards
honoring African-American authors and illustrators of outstanding
books for children and young adults. For “Bronx Masquerade,” an edgy
novel featuring the voices of 18 urban youths, Nikki Grimes is a 2003
winner.
Grimes also is the author of “Talking About Bessie: The Story of
Aviator Elizabeth Coleman,” for which artist E.B. Lewis received a
Coretta Scott King Award for illustration.
“Each skillfully drawn, realistic and dramatic painting highlights
Bessie’s determination, excitement, pride or joy,” observed Award
Committee Chair Fran Ware.
For his powerful novel, “Postcards from No Man’s Land,” Aidan
Chambers received the 2003 Michael L. Printz Award recognizing
outstanding young adult literature. Told in alternating narratives of
a teen visiting Amsterdam to find his grandfather’s grave and the
woman who cared for the wounded man during World War II, the story
explores love, sex and family secrets. While discovering that nothing
in Amsterdam is what it appears to be, 17-year-old Jacob finds no
tidy answers, just a sense of the complexity of human love and
frailty.
* “Check it Out” is written by the staff of the Newport Beach
Public Library. This week’s column is by Melissa Adams with Bonnie
McLaren.
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