Showing posts with label Printz. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Printz. Show all posts

Saturday

Heart to Heart

Heart to Heart: New Poems Inspired by Twentieth-Century American Art
ed. Jan Greenberg
Poetry. 78 pp.
Abrams Books for Young Readers. 2001.

flap copy:

Like valentines sent from one heart to another, the poems inspired by the images in this unique collection offer a special look at art and poetry. Written by forty-three distinguished American poets, these specially commissioned poems expand on twentieth-century American art, highlighting not only the strength and diversity of the works, but also exploring the story of our national experience throughout the past century. The poems combine with the artwork of such artists as Edward Hopper and Kiki Smith to create a distinctive connection between image and word.

The paintings, lithographs, sculpture, mixed media, and photographs gathered here represent the most important artistic movements of the past century—from American modernism to abstract expressionism to pop art. Prompted by these works, the poems narrate, describe, and explore; they vary from such topics as dreams, childhood memories, and issues of race and gender to reflections on the artist and the visual structure of the images. Each poem allows the reader an opportunity to see the works from a new and exciting perspective.

Whether playful, challenging, humorous, or sad, each poem and image connects the reader and the viewer, the writer and the artist, and celebrates the power of art to affect language. Pairing the work of some of America's most prominent poets, from Jane Yolen and Siv Cedering to X. J. Kennedy and William Jay Smith with the best of American art, from works by Jacob Lawrence and Georgia O'Keeffe to Jackson Pollock and Louise Bourgeois, this book will delight and inspire readers of all ages.

Completed June 8

Initially, I thought this book was amazing and had decided I was going to get a copy for the kids to have. I really liked that you had poetry inspired by and about art. I also read this a little while after we'd finished going through a pretty solid poetry unit with the Boy.* Following that assignment, I felt compelled to find poetry books for the kids to have so that they could broaden their minds a bit and start to become intelligent and worthwhile persons. (I'm sure people who knew me when are rolling their eyes at my advocacy of poetry. Or they're on their knees repenting since The End Must Surely Be Nigh. Either or. But exposure to editorgirl will do that to you.) So I was excited when I found this book that married poetry with my other academic love—art.

Now that some time has passed, I find that my feelings of love and adoration have quelled significantly. There was more poetry in there that didn't impress than there was that did. At least in terms of what I remember. I think the organizational breakdown for the book is a good concept but ineffectively realized.

Even so, I'm pleased that this book won the Printz honor if for no other reason than it puts a book of poetry (much of which is not bad even if I'm not interested in reading it again) in the canon for kids to come across.

*Let me just say how cool the Boy is. One of his assignments was to choose his five favorite poems and write an analysis of them. Oh. But your favorite poems can't be Dr. Seuss. Or Shel Sivlerstein. Or a nursery rhyme. Or something we've studied in class. These are seventh graders, for crying out loud. As if they're truly aware of any poets aside from these. So I spent a weekend with the Boy (the weekend before the assignment was due, mind you) just trying to find poetry that he liked. Fortunately, Absent had earlier given me a picture book of poetry about dragons by Jack Prelutsky, and since the Boy lurves dragons, that took care of one.

But, to return to how cool the Boy is, I'm sure he's the only one who showed up back in class with a poem I'm sure the teacher had never studied (I don't think very highly of the intellectual prowess of the kids' teachers, truth be told), turning in an analysis of Gerard Manley Hopkins's "As kingfishers catch fire," which he chose of his own free will and volition. (Yes, I adore the poem, but he rejected heaps of poems that I adore, including some phenomenal stuff by Langston Hughes that I thought he would like.) True, he didn't select it because of its poignant religious imagery (though he did write about that in his analysis because we had a good discussion about it) or because Hopkins is a god among poets; he chose it because it has fire in it. I say, go with whatever gets the assignment done. And be cool in the process.

Oh. And he has the makings of becoming a fairly decent poet himself, should he wish to pursue that. As part of this unit, he had to write a poem. His mother and step-father accused him of stealing it from the interwebs. Fortunately, I've paid enough attention to his interests and creative writing prowess to know that this was his work.

Repossessed

Repossessed
by A. M. Jenkins
YA fiction. 218 pp.
HarperTeen. 2007.

from the flap copy:

Don't call me a demon. I prefer the term Fallen Angel.

Everybody deserves a vacation, right? Especially if you have a pointless job like tormenting the damned. So who could blame me for blowing off my duties and taking a small, unauthorized break?

Besides, I've always wanted to see what physical existence is like. That's why I "borrowed" the slightly used body of a slacker teen. Believe me, he wasn't going to be using it anymore anyway.

I have never understood why humans do the things they do. Like sin—if it's so terrible, why do they keep doing it?

I'm going to have a lot of fun finding out!

This is another book I read ages ago (March 8). Consequently, I'm now left with fading impressions. I remember that it read fairly well. It wasn't my favorite book I've read. To be honest, I'm not even sure why it won an award as it didn't stand out to me as something phenomenal.

I like the idea behind the plot in that a Fallen Angel decides to hijack the body of a kid who was stepping out in front of a car and about to die anyway. He then gets to finally have a human experience. I like that this "devil" character actually ends up doing a lot of good in the lives he touches, albeit that wasn't his intention. Yes, he was a bit obsessed with sex (which is the great criticism that I recall coming across from other reviews I had read), but I didn't think it was as bad as the other reviewers made it out be. Besides, so few teenage boys aren't obsessed with sex.

Anyway, it's not my favorite Printz book I've read. It does have one of the sharper covers, but that's not necessarily a reason to recommend it.

Other reviews:
The Book Muncher

Thursday

The White Darkness

The White Darkness
by Geraldine McCaughrean
YA fiction. 363 pp.
HarperTempest. 2007.

the flap copy:

Sym is not your average teenage girl. She is obsessed with the Antarctic and the brave, romantic figure of Captain Oates from Scott's doomed expedition to the South Pole. In fact, Oates is the secret confidant to whom she spills all her hopes and fears.

But Sym's uncle Victor is even more obsessed—and when he takes her on a dream trip into the bleak Antarctic wilderness, it turns into a nightmarish struggle for survival that will challenge everything she knows and loves.


I read this book because it won the Printz this year and because I added it to my Printz Award Challenge. It took me a bit of time to get into it, but I'm glad I continued to work through it, even if I did interrupt the reading with other books along the way.

I had initial difficulty getting into it because I just didn't like Sym. Fortunately, one thing she had going for her was that I could tell that I would more than likely end up liking her. I had to work at this, because she adores her uncle, who I could tell was a very bad seed from the get-go. And she's very passive, which I find to be an amazingly taxing trait to tolerate. She was also a bit slow on figuring out what was going on. I've noticed that I can handle this in third-person narratives, but I don't take it quite as well in first-person narratives.

Perhaps the oddest bit about this book is Sym's relationship with Captain Oates. In fact, it's the second British YA I've read in the last couple months where the protagonist has a real person as an imaginary friend. Whereas in Slam the imaginary friend only speaks in sentences lifted from his autobiography, in this one, Sym actually converses with Oates. On the one hand, that was weird. On the other hand, it brought Oates to life for me in a way that makes him rather intriguing.

After my experience with the beginning of the book, I was having difficulties understanding why it had won the Printz. By the end of the book, when I was actually liking the protagonist, I was able to notice the excellent use of language, and that is where I think the beauty of The White Darkness lies.

Tuesday

must reads 2008

The children's book awards were announced last Monday at the ALA's midwinter meeting in Philadelphia.

John Newbery Medal
Good Masters! Sweet Ladies! Voices from a Medieval Village by Laura Amy Schlitz

Newbery Honor Books
Elijah of Buxton by Christopher Paul Curtis
The Wednesday Wars by Gary D. Schmidt
Feathers by Jacqueline Woodson

Randolph Caldecott Medal
The Invention of Hugo Cabret illustrated by Brian Selznick

Caldecott Honor Books
Henry's Freedom Box: A True Story from the Underground Railroad illustrated by Kadir Nelson
First the Egg illustrated by Laura Vaccaro Seeger
The Wall: Growing Up Behind the Iron Curtain illustrated by Peter Sís
Knuffle Bunny Too: A Case of Mistaken Identity illustrated by Mo Willems

Michael L. Printz Award
The White Darkness by Geraldine McCaughrean

Printz Honor Books
Dreamquake: Book Two of the Dreamhunter Duet by Elizabeth Knox,
One Whole and Perfect Day by Judith Clarke
Repossessed by A. M. Jenkins
Your Own, Sylvia: A Verse Portrait of Sylvia Plath by Stephanie Hemphill

Coretta Scott King Book Award
Elijah of Buxton by Christopher Paul Curtis

King Author Honor Books
November Blues by Sharon M. Draper
Twelve Rounds to Glory: The Story of Muhammad Ali by Charles R. Smith Jr.

Coretta Scott King Illustrator Award
Let it Shine by Ashley Bryan

King Illustrator Honor Books
The Secret Olivia Told Me by Nancy Devard
Jazz on a Saturday Night by Leo and Diane Dillon

Coretta Scott King/John Steptoe New Talent Author Award
Brendan Buckley's Universe and Everything in It by Sundee T. Frazier

Schneider Family Book Award (for books that embody the artistic expression of the disability experience for child and adolescent audiences)
Kami and the Yaks by Andrea Stenn Stryer (age 0–10)
Reaching for Sun by Tracie Vaughn Zimmer (age 11–13)
Hurt Go Happy by Ginny Rorby (age 13-18)

Theodor Seuss Geisel Beginning Reader Award
There Is a Bird on Your Head! by Mo Willems

Geisel Honor Books
First the Egg by Laura Vaccaro Seeger
Hello, Bumblebee Bat by Darrin Lunde
Jazz Baby by Lisa Wheeler
Vulture View by April Pulley Sayre

Margaret A. Edwards Award (for lifetime achievement in writing for young adults)
Orson Scott Card

Robert F. Sibert Informational Book Award
The Wall: Growing Up Behind the Iron Curtain by Peter Sís

Sibert Honor Books
Lightship by Brian Floca
Nic Bishop Spiders by Nic Bishop

Mildred L. Batchelder Award (for the most outstanding children’s book translated from a foreign language and subsequently published in the United States)
Brave Story (originally published in Japanese in 2003 as Bureibu Sutori by Miyuki Miyabe and translated by Alexander O. Smith)

Batchelder Honor Books
The Cat: Or, How I Lost Eternity [Die Katze]
Nicholas and the Gang [Le petit Nicolas et les copains]

Alex Awards (for the best adult books that appeal to teen audiences)
American Shaolin: Flying Kicks, Buddhist Monks, and the Legend of Iron Crotch: An Odyssey in the New China by Matthew Polly
Bad Monkeys by Matt Ruff
Essex County Volume 1: Tales from the Farm by Jeff Lemire
Genghis: Birth of an Empire by Conn Iggulden
The God of Animals by Aryn Kyle
A Long Way Gone: Memoirs of a Boy Soldier by Ishmael Beah
Mister Pip by Lloyd Jones
The Name of the Wind by Patrick Rothfuss
The Night Birds by Thomas Maltman
The Spellman Files by Lisa Lutz

May Hill Arbuthnot Honor Lecture (for an individual of distinction in the field of children's literature)
Walter Dean Myers

Monday

must reads 2007

The children's book awards were announced this morning at the ALA-s midwinter meeting in Seattle. (As with previous posts, those I've already read are indicated in red.)

John Newbery Medal
The Higher Power of Lucky by Susan Patron

Newbery Honor Books
Penny from Heaven by Jennifer L. Holm
Hattie Big Sky by Kirby Larson
Rules by Cynthia Lord

Randolph Caldecott Medal
Flotsam illustrated by David Wiesner

Caldecott Honor Books
Gone Wild: An Endangered Animal Alphabet illustrated by David McLimans
Moses: When Harriet Tubman Led Her People to Freedom illustrated by Kadir Nelson

Michael L. Printz Award
American Born Chinese by Gene Luen Yang

Printz Honor Books
The Astonishing Life of Octavian Nothing, Traitor to the Nation; v. 1: The Pox Party by M. T. Anderson
An Abundance of Katherines by John Green
Surrender by Sonya Hartnett
The Book Thief by Markus Zusak

Coretta Scott King Book Award
Copper Sun by Sharon Draper

King Author Honor Book
The Road to Paris by Nikki Grimes

Coretta Scott King Illustrator Award
Moses: When Harriet Tubman Led Her People to Freedom illustrated by Kadir Nelson

King Illustrator Honor Books
Jazz illustrated by Christopher Myers
Poetry for Young People: Langston Hughes illustrated by Benny Andrews

Coretta Scott King/John Steptoe New Talent Author Award
Standing Against the Wind by Traci L. Jones

Schneider Family Book Award (for books that embody the artistic expression of the disability experience for child and adolescent audiences)
The Deaf Musicians by Pete Seeger (age 0-10)
Rules by Cynthia Lord (age 11-13)
Small Steps by Louis Sachar (age 13-18)

Theodor Seuss Geisel Beginning Reader Award
Zelda and Ivy: The Runaways by Laura McGee Kvasnosky

Geisel Honor Books
Mercy Watson Goes for a Ride by Kate DiCamillo
Move Over, Rover! by Karen Beaumont
Not a Box by Antoinette Portis

Margaret A. Edwards Award (for lifetime achievement in writing for young adults)
Lois Lowry

Laura Ingalls Wilder Award (for a substantial and lasting contribution to literature for children)
James Marshall

Robert F. Sibert Informational Book Award
Team Moon: How 400,000 People Landed Apollo 11 on the Moon by Catherine Thimmesh

Sibert Honor Books
Freedom Riders: John Lewis and Jim Zwerg on the Front Lines of the Civil Rights Movement by Ann Bausum
Quest for the Tree Kangaroo: An Expedition to the Cloud Forest of New Guinea by Sy Montgomery
To Dance: A Ballerina’s Graphic Novel by Siena Cherson Siegel

Mildred L. Batchelder Award (for the most outstanding children’s book translated from a foreign language and subsequently published in the United States)
The Pull of the Ocean (originally published in France in 1999 as L’enfant Océan by Jean-Claude Mourlevat and translated by Y. Maudet)

Batchelder Honor Books
The Killer’s Tears
The Last Dragon

Alex Awards (for the best adult books that appeal to teen audiences)
The Book of Lost Things by John Connolly
The Whistling Season by Ivan Doig
Eagle Blue: A Team, a Tribe, and a High School Basketball Season in Arctic Alaska by Michael D’Orso
Water for Elephants by Sara Gruen
Color of the Sea by John Hamamura
The Floor of the Sky by Pamela Carter Joern
The Blind Side: Evolution of a Game by Michael Lewis
Black Swan Green by David Mitchell
The World Made Straight by Ron Rash
The Thirteenth Tale by Diane Setterfield

May Hill Arbuthnot Honor Lecture (for an individual of distinction in the field of children's literature)
David Macaulay

Tuesday

I Am the Messenger

I Am the Messenger
by Markus Zusak
YA fiction. 357 pp.
Knopf. 2005.

Pat Castelli aptly summarizes this book as follows:

This is an exciting adventure/mystery story about a young man, Ed, who is going nowhere until presented with a series of challenges that help make the world a better place. The foremost question in Ed's mind is about who is giving the orders, someone who has godlike knowledge. The resolution of that mystery felt like a cheat to me, and thus was a disappointing ending to a really good book. Cautions: very foul language, though much of it is Australian, sexuality (mostly wishful thinking) and violence that includes rape.

By and large, I'm going to have to agree with her sentiment.

One of the things I find interesting about the Printz award is how open it seems to be. For example, the Newbery and Caldecott must each go to American authors. The Printz hasn't been limited thus. Also, the books don't really need to be exactly YA per se. That was what I found most difficult about getting into this novel. I really don't think it's YA. I could point out specific identifying features that might lend to this (the protagonist is 20 and far removed from high school), but the difficulty with YA is that, when it comes down to it, there aren't hard and fast rules. Mostly, this just didn't feel YA. At the same time, it didn't feel adult. So I wasn't sure how to peg it.

Once I got over that, I did find it to be a largely enjoyable story. You really grow to truly love Ed as he faces the tasks. And the format (as in the chapter numbering) was also unique and enjoyable, helping add to the tension of the novel.

But like Pat, I didn't like the ending. It was somewhat of a copout. And I hated the last line. Hated, hated, hated it. Then again, I hate weak final words. There's a good chance that were I the editor, I would have cut the last three sentences. Of course, ending it there doesn't necessarily make sense, but it has more strength.

I do recommend this book, though I would caution you to watch for the profanity, because it's endless and doesn't really contribute anything to the plot or characterization.

Looking for Alaska

Looking for Alaska
by John Green
YA fiction. 221 pp.
Dutton. 2005.

From the flap copy:

Miles Halter is fascinated by famous last words--and tired of his safe life at home. He leaves for boarding school to seek what the dying poet Francois Rabelais called the "Great Perhaps." Much awaits Miles at Culver Creek, including Alaska Young. Clever, funny, screwed-up, and dead sexy, Alaska will pull Miles into her labyrinth and catapult him into the Great Perhaps.

Looking for Alaska is the recipient of this year's Printz award. I don't know if I would necessarily say it's the best in young adult fiction that I've seen this year, but it is good. The characters are fascinating in their eccentricities. The layout of the book is slightly unusual (chapters are titled along the lines of "one hundred nine days before" and "twenty-seven days after"), which was a compelling way to create forward momentum and tension in the first part of the book. I liked how the theme was woven into the entirety of the novel, and it didn't feel trite or contrived.

There were some elements of the plot that I don't feel were adequately resolved and some bits that were left to hang. But overall, it was a good book that I enjoyed reading.

Now, that said, many people will not enjoy reading this book. One of the editors at Dutton presented at UVSC's recent Forum on Children & Literature. A member of the audience raised her concern that she just couldn't recommend the book because of its content. I enjoyed the look on his face when he essentially poo-pooed her comment. As he said, this book deals with some heavy themes about identity and relationships and what not. I realize her concern is that the kids in the book smoke and drink. I think the book neither condemns nor condones such behavior, and maybe that's what she took issue with.

And, yes, there is some exploration of sexuality in the book. In one of the sessions at the conference, Pat Castelli recommended this as one of her favorite books of the year, commenting that "strong language, sexuality, under-age drinking, etc., will make this book controversial, but the characters are vibrant and the lessons learned by those left behind are the hardest kind. The book will leave the reader thinking about many things long after the last word is read." She went on to mention that there is an oral sex scene in the novel but that it was funny. The audience tittered, gasps of horror escaping their pursed lips. But the scene is funny. (And it begins on page 126 for those interested.)

So I enjoyed this book. I do recommend it, but just read it forewarned.

Oh, and check out the author's site. As Coworker mentioned, he seems cool enough to want to set up with your friends.

Monday

must reads 2006

2006 Newbery Award

  • Criss Cross by Lynne Rae Perkins. "Writing in a wry, omniscient third-person narrative voice, Perkins deftly captures the tentativeness and incompleteness of adolescence," said Award Committee Chair Barbara Barstow. "In 38 brief chapters, this poetic, postmodern novel experiments with a variety of styles: haiku, song lyrics, question-and-answer dialogue and split-screen scenarios. With seeming yet deliberate randomness, Perkins writes an orderly, innovative, and risk-taking book in which nothing happens and everything happens."
  • Whittington by Alan Armstrong. In Whittington, Armstrong creates a glorious barnyard fantasy that seamlessly weaves together three tales: Whittington the cat'’s arrival on Bernie'’s farm, his retelling of the traditional legend of his 14th-century namesake, and one boy'’s struggle to learn to read. These three tales unite the disparate citizens of the barn community in a celebration of oral and written language, the support of friends, the healing power of humor and the triumph of life.
  • Hitler Youth: Growing Up in Hitler's Shadow by Susan Bartoletti. How could the Holocaust have happened? Bartoletti delivers a chilling answer by exploring Hitler'’s rise to power through the first-hand experiences of young followers whose adolescent zeal he so successfully exploited and the more extraordinary few who risked certain death in resisting. The meticulously researched volume traces the Hitler Youth movement from the time it formally gathered strength in the early 1930s through the defeat of the Third Reich. The grace and clarity of the writing make Hitler Youth: Growing Up in Hitler'’s Shadow a powerful addition to Holocaust literature for children.
  • Princess Academy by Shannon Hale. Miri and the other young women of her rocky highland village are forced to leave their close-knit community when the prince must choose a bride in The Princess Academy. Like the miri flower, which sprouts from the cracks in the linder rock, Miri soon becomes the strong, resilient and courageous leader of the academy. The book is a fresh approach to the traditional princess story with unexpected plot twists and great emotional resonance.
  • Show Way by Jacqueline Woodson. "And the children leaned in./And listened real hard." Jacqueline Woodson's magnificent poem Show Way tells the story of slavery, emancipation, and triumph for each generation of her maternal ancestors. She pays tribute to the creative women who guided their "tall and straight-boned" daughters to courage, self-sufficiency, and freedom. Whether with quilts or stories, poems or songs, these women discovered and shared the strength to carry on. "There's a road, girl./There's a road."


2006 Printz Award
  • Looking for Alaska by John Green. Tired of his boring existence, 16-year-old Miles 'Pudge' Halter heads off to seek his 'Great Perhaps' at an Alabama boarding school, where newfound freedom, guilty pleasures, and an enigmatic girl named Alaska hurl him into life. First-time author John Green writes with intimacy, humor and insight about a world where intense friendship can lead to devastating loss.
  • Black Juice by Margo Lanagan. Between the covers of Black Juice lies a challenging and lyrical short story collection where mad clowns, dragon angels, sad elephants and dancing gypsies reside. Incorporating elements of science fiction, fantasy and horror, each story transports readers to richly realized worlds that defy definition.
  • I Am the Messenger by Markus Zusak. In I Am the Messenger, an unknown presence sends an aimless young cab driver on a series of life-altering missions that raise questions about the way life--and stories--are structured.
  • John Lennon: All I Want Is the Truth, a Photographic Biography by Elizabeth Partridge. Quintessential rebel John Lennon comes alive in John Lennon: All I Want Is the Truth with words that sing, as well as striking photographs, some never before published. Together they help readers imagine the man whose talent and passion transformed a generation.
  • A Wreath for Emmett Till by Marilyn Nelson. A tragic story is at the heart of A Wreath for Emmett Till, a heroic crown of sonnets. Each sonnet serves as a powerful tribute to a young life lost to the violence of America's racial history.

Tuesday

How I Live Now

How I Live Now
by Meg Rosoff
YA fiction. 194 pp.
Wendy Lamb Books. 2004.
2005 Printz Award.

from Kirkus Reviews:
Manhattanite Daisy, 15, moves to London to stay with an aunt and cousins she's never met. Without preamble or fanfare, an unidentified enemy attacks and war ensues. Her aunt is abroad on a peace mission, meaning that Daisy and her three cousins, with whom she forges a remarkable relationship, must survive almost entirely on their own. This is a very relatable contemporary story, told in honest, raw first-person and filled with humor, love, pathos, and carnage. War, as it will, changes these young people irrevocably, not necessarily for the worse. They and readers know that no one will ever be the same. The story of Daisy and her three exceptional cousins, one of whom becomes her first lover, offers a keen perspective on human courage and resilience. An epilogue, set six years after the conclusion, while war still lingers, ends Daisy's story on a bittersweet, hopeful note.

Do you remember yesterday when I talked about how refreshing it was to read Flush as a reprieve from the Weird Award-Winning Books? Well, this is the book it happily interrupted. As you can tell from the summary by Kirkus, this book has some weird stuff to it. Primarily that by page 50, Daisy is, ahem, intimate with her cousin Edmond. It's kinda weird. Okay, it's really weird. But since I read books to their conclusion (a personality flaw I'm cursed with), I finished the book.

There are some things notable about the book. The voice is strong and distinct. The writing style is gripping. There are some wonderful turns of phrases and images here and there. (At one point, Daisy describes eating a peanut butter and jelly sandwich after a night of fleeing the enemy as "hopeful.") The setting is an odd but extremely well-done combination of contemporary and World War II. The characters themselves are intriguing. Daisy is anorexic (part of the reason she's been shipped off to England). Edmond and Daisy have a telepathic connection that enables them to communicate with each other across wide distances. Edmond's twin brother can communicate with animals, as can his younger sister. And then there's the struggle as Daisy is forced to mature as she tries to cross the country with her youngest cousin in search of their other cousins.

But despite all that's good, I still find that I can't get past the cousin loving. I realize it's not a taboo everywhere and that marriage between cousins is even legal in some places. But still . . .

I can't give this book a full endorsement, but I would be interested in reading this author again.