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 Award Winning Books
(Information from ALA.org)
2008 John Newberry Medal Winner
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In “Good Masters! Sweet Ladies! Voices from
a Medieval Village,” thirteenth-century England springs to life using 21 dramatic
individual narratives that introduce young inhabitants of village and manor; from Hugo, the lord's
nephew, to Nelly, the sniggler. Schlitz's elegant monologues and dialogues draw back the curtain on
the period, revealing character and relationships, hinting at stories untold. Explanatory interludes
add information and round out this historical and theatrical presentation.
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2008 John Newberry Honor Books
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Elijah of Buxton by Christopher Paul
Curtis  (Scholastic)
In Elijah of Buxton, Elijah is the first
free-born child in Buxton, a Canadian community of escaped slaves, in 1860. With masterful storytelling,
vibrant humor, and poignant insight into the realities of slavery and the meaning of freedom, Curtis
takes readers on a journey that transforms a “fragile” 11-year-old boy into a courageous hero.

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In The Wednesday Wars, seventh-grader,
Holling Hoodhood, is convinced his teacher hates him. Through their Wednesday afternoon Shakespeare
sessions she helps him cope with events both wildly funny and deadly serious. “To thine own self be
true” is just one of the life lessons he learns.
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Feathers by Jacqueline Woodson (Putman)
Feathers tells the story of how a new boy's arrival in a sixth-grade classroom helps
Frannie recognize the barriers that separate people, and the importance of hope as a bridge. Transcendent
imagery and lyrical prose deftly capture a girl learning to navigate the world through words.
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2007 John Newberry Medal Winner
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The 2007 Newbery Medal winner is The Higher Power of Lucky written by Susan
Patron, illustrated by Matt Phelan, published by Simon & Schuster/Richard Jackson.
In The Higher Power of Lucky, Patron takes us to the California desert community
of Hard Pan (population 43). Ten-year-old Lucky Trimble eavesdrops on 12-step program meetings
from her hiding place behind Hard Pan’s Found Object Wind Chime Museum & Visitor Center.
Eccentric characters and quirky details spice up Lucky’s life just as her guardian Brigitte’s
fresh parsley embellishes her French cuisine.
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2007 John Newberry Honor Books
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Penny from Heaven by Jennifer L. Holm, (Random House)
In Holm’s book, 11-year-old Penny looks forward to spending the summer
rooting for the Brooklyn Dodgers and scheming with her cousin Frankie. Instead she
navigates the space between her two families and uncovers the reason for their estrangement
in this funny and touching tale of intergenerational love set in 1953.
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Hattie Big Sky by Kirby Larson (Delacorte Press)
Hattie Big Sky, 16-year-old orphan Hattie Brooks is looking for
a place to belong – a home. In 1918 she leaves Iowa for the Montana prairie. In this
engaging first-person narrative, Hattie strives to forge a new life. Vivid imagery and careful
attention to historical detail distinguish this memorable novel that portrays her struggle to
“prove her claim.
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Rules by Cynthia Lord (Scholastic)
"A boy can take off his shirt to swim, but not his shorts.” Twelve-year-old Catherine creates
rules for her younger, autistic brother David in an attempt to normalize his life and her own;
but what is normal? In the debut novel, Rules Lord’s heroine learns to use words to forge
connections with her brother, her workaholic father and a paraplegic friend. With humor and
insight, Lord demonstrates the transforming power of language.
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2008 Randolph Caldecott Medal Winner
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From an opening shot of the full moon setting over an awakening Paris in 1931, this tale
casts a new light on the picture book form. Hugo is a young orphan secretly living in the walls
of a train station where he labors to complete a mysterious invention left by his father. In a
work of more than 500 pages, the suspenseful text and wordless double-page spreads narrate the
tale in turns. Neither words nor pictures alone tell this story, which is filled with cinematic
intrigue. Black & white pencil illustrations evoke the flickering images of the silent films
to which the book pays homage.
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2008 Randolph Caldecott Honor Books
Henry's Freedom Box: A True Story from the Underground Railroad by
illustrated by Kadir Nelson, written by Ellen Levine (Scholastic Press)
Inspired by an antique lithograph, Kadir Nelson has created dramatically luminous illustrations that
portray Henry “Box” Brown's ingenious design to ship himself in a box from slavery to freedom.
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First the Egg, written and illustrated by Laura Vaccaro Seeger (Roaring Brook/Neal Porter)
Laura Vaccaro Seeger's innovative concept book on transformations, First the Egg uses
strategically placed die-cuts to provide an astonishing visual explication of the word “then.” Her
richly textured brushstrokes creatively reveal the process of metamorphosis for young readers.
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The Wall: Growing Up Behind the Iron Curtain, written and illustrated by Peter Sís (Farrar/Frances Foster)
The Wall: Growing Up Behind the Iron Curtain, a graphic memoir of Sís's youth in
Prague, brilliantly weds artistic and design choices to content: tight little panels with officious
lines and red punctuation; full-bleed line-and-watercolor spreads of nightmares and dreams; color and
absence of color.
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Knuffle Bunny Too: A Case of Mistaken Identity, written and illustrated Mo Willems (Hyperion)
Willems sets the stage for one of the most dramatic double-paged spreads in picture-book history in
Knuffle Bunny Too: A Case of Mistaken Identity. Masterful photo collages take Trixie and
her daddy through their now-familiar Brooklyn neighborhood to the Pre-K class where Trixie discovers
that her beloved Knuffle Bunny is not “so one-of-a-kind anymore.”
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2007 Randolph Caldecott Medal Winner
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The 2007 Caldecott Medal winner is Flotsam by David Wiesner (Clarion)
Flotsam is a cinematic unfolding of discovery. A vintage camera washed up on the beach
provides a young boy with a surprising view of fantastical images from the bottom of the sea. From fish-eye to
lens-eye, readers see a frame-by-frame narrative of lush marinescapes ebbing and flowing from the real to the
surreal.
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2007 Randolph Caldecott Honor Books
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Gone Wild: An Endangered Animal Alphabet by David McLimans (Walker)
Gone Wild: An Endangered Animal Alphabet is a black-and-white iconic alphabet that is sophisticated
enough to intrigue and captivate readers of any age. A contemporary interpretation of an illuminated
alphabet melds animals and letters into 26 unique and elegant graphic images.
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Moses: When Harriet Tubman Led Her People to Freedom illustrated by Kadir Nelson, written
by Carole Boston Weatherford (Hyperion/Jump at the Sun)
Nelson’s dramatic renderings evoke the spiritual and physical journey of Harriet Tubman. Emotionally
powerful images combined with poetically evocative text portray a strong woman who followed her star to
an extraordinary destiny.
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2008
Coretta Scott King Book Award Recipients
Author Award
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Elijah of Buxton by Christopher Paul Curtis (Scholastic)
In Elijah of Buxton, Elijah is the first free-born child in Buxton, a Canadian community
of escaped slaves, in 1860. With masterful storytelling, vibrant humor, and poignant insight into the
realities of slavery and the meaning of freedom, Curtis takes readers on a journey that transforms a
“fragile” 11-year-old boy into a courageous hero.
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Author Honor Books
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November Blues bySharon Draper (Atheneum Books for Young Adults
When November Nelson loses her boyfriend, Josh, to a pledge stunt gone horribly wrong, she thinks her
life can't possibly get any worse. But Josh left something behind that will change November's life forever,
and now she's faced with the biggest decision she could ever imagine. How in the world will she tell her mom?
And how will Josh's parents take the news? She's never needed a friend more.
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From the moment a fired-up teenager from Kentucky won 1960 Olympic gold to the day in 1996 when a retired
legend, hands shaking from Parkinson’s, returned to raise the Olympic torch, the boxer known as "The
Greatest" waged many a fight. Some were in the ring, against opponents like Sonny Liston and Joe
Frazier; others were against societal prejudice and against a war he refused to support because of his
Islamic faith.
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Illustrator Award
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Bryan's vibrant illustrations interpret and energize three beloved songs:
"This Little Light of
Mine," "Oh, When the Saints Go Marching In," and "He's Got the Whole World in His
Hands." Although the artistic style is similar to that in All Night, All Day (Atheneum, 1991), here
Bryan uses intricate cut-paper collages to accompany the lines of text at the bottom of the pages. Readers
will find themselves humming as they turn the pages.
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Illustrator Honor Books
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Can you keep a secret? Olivia has a secret - a BIG secret. It's a secret that she tells
only to her very best friend. And her friend promises she won't say a word. But the secret is
really BIG and really Juicy. What happens when a trusted friend slips and the secret gets out?
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If you have ever been lucky enough to hear great jazz, then you will understand the pure
magic of this book. Leo and Diane Dillon use bright colors and musical patterns that make
music skip off the page in this toe-tapping homage to many jazz greats. From Miles Davis and
Charlie Parker to Ella Fitzgerald, here is a dream team sure to knock your socks off. Learn
about this popular music form and read a biography of each player pictured-and then hear each
instrument play on a specially produced CD. What's the featured song? "Jazz on a
Saturday Night," written and recorded to accompany this book.
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John Steptoe New Talent Award - Author
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Brendan Buckley's Universe and Everything in It , written and illustrated by
Sundee T. Frazier (Delacoric Press)
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