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Viewing: Blog Posts Tagged with: shoulda won a Caldecott, Most Recent at Top [Help]
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1. Always Bridesmaids, Never Brides: Caldecott Almosts

There is a phenomenon that I have detected in the wide world of Caldecott Awards.  A phenomenon to which one cannot ascribe blame, but rather occurs in a bubble outside of any logic or comprehension.  It’s something I’ve noticed for a little while but have never put a name to.

Inspiration for this post came when I was reading a recent PW report on the second gathering of Children’s Books Boston.  In the piece (called Why Did That Book Win?: A Children’s Books Boston Discussion) Vicky Smith said something about the newly minted Caldecott winner Brian Floca that I have been turning over in my mind ever since.  Quoth Smith: “He seemed to be a permanent bridesmaid.”  Which is to say, the kind of fellow who might win a Sibert once in a while, but that might, for whatever reason, never be granted the universe’s favor in terms of a shiny gold Caldecott.  When my heart was broken after Moonshot‘s failure to launch (so to speak) I confess I began to feel as Vicky did.  That no matter how brilliant the book, Floca might never attain the title of Caldecott Award winning illustrator.

Is it such a big deal to bemoan?  Consider, if you will the other “bridesmaids” who have never won a Caldecott proper and yet remain some of the brightest lights in the field. Our cannon of children’s books is full of folks who never were properly appreciated in their lifetime (James Marshall, anyone?).  Still, one cannot help but wonder why some of today’s folks, for all that we acknowledge their marvelous talents, never win.  Consider this post then an off-kilter combination of keening lament and high-stepping praise, declaring far and wide that the following folks are brilliant and if there were any justice in the universe (fun fact: there is not) they would each and every one of them be Caldecott Award winners in their own right.  To wit:

Jonathan Bean – He’s still relatively new in his career and he has lots of luscious time before we can truly write him off.  Building Our House was beloved of the Boston Globe-Horn Book Awards and his other books have certainly collected accolades.  I think we have not yet seen the last of Mr. Bean and his beautiful books.

Carin Berger – This one baffles me.  How is it that she hasn’t gotten any lovin’ from ALSC?  Consider, if you will, the splendor of her cut paper works.  The joyful beauty of Stardines Swim High Across the Sky.  If ever a cut paper / collage artist deserved it, she would.

Sophie Blackall – One wonders if Caldecott committees tend towards the element of surprise.  Consider recent winners and awards that went to debut artists.  It makes me wonder if, when an artist has a distinctive and easily identifiable style that doesn’t change, if that works against their favor.  Ms. Blackall did get creative with last year’s The Mighty Lalouche.  Ah well.

Bagram Ibatoulline – The mystery of Bagram Ibatoulline is perhaps the starkest case of bafflement I have.  There is not a soul alive who can look at his books and say that the man isn’t rife with talent.  Sometimes it isn’t a question of talent, though, but rather the artist finding the right project to match their prodigious skill (see: Kadir Nelson).  In the case of Mr. Ibatoulline, I thought that requirement had been met when he produced last year’s The Matchbox Diary with Paul Fleischman.  Consider the pedigree!  A Newbery Award winning author and an illustrator that can only be compared to someone like Robert Ingpen in terms of true skill.  Yet the 2014 Awards came and went and for Mr. Ibatoulline there were to be no shiny stickers or glorious 6 a.m. wake up calls.  Boggles the mind, it does.

Barbara McClintock – Another bafflement.  I adore her work.  My kiddo adores her work (truly that Gingerbread Man was a work of art).  She’s akin to Charles Vess or someone similar in terms of true skill.  So why does she never get any medals?  What about Adele and Simon?

Yuyi Morales – I’m not giving up on this one.  She’s brilliant and creative and her style changes all the friggin’ time.  Compare the soft focus of Little Night to the models in My Abuelita to the truly eclectic eye-popping poster style of Nino Wrestles the World.  This woman is a rip-roaring talent and at some point she’s going to get more than just a Pura Belpre Award or Honor (not that I don’t love those awards too, but how cool would it be if she won in both categories?).

Kadir Nelson – When they speak of artists that never win, they are usually referring to Kadir Nelson.  Fortunately the man is incredibly young and has plenty of time to get something shiny before his time on this earth fades to gray.  I truly and honestly believe that he just hasn’t found the right book for his art yet.  Time after time his art arrests the viewer’s eye but the text isn’t quite there.  His latest book Baby Bear aims to change all that.  We shall see.

LeUyen Pham – Still a bit peeved that her art on The Boy Who Loved Math didn’t get proper acclaim.  One would think that the mere fact that she managed to seamlessly incorporate math into the images would have garnered great love and shiny medals alone!  No such luck.  That’s okay.  She’ll get something at some point here.  I feel it in my bones.

Gennady Spirin – In case you were wondering, he lives in Princeton.  He, like Ibatoulline, is a case of me wondering if he’s just too good.  Too talented to ever get the award.  I mean, what would he have to do?  The art is so fascinating and beautiful that it practically screams to be recognized.

Who are your own favorite bridesmaids?  With any luck, by the time a year passes we’ll be able to knock a couple of these folks off the list, easy peasy.

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10 Comments on Always Bridesmaids, Never Brides: Caldecott Almosts, last added: 3/17/2014
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2. Newbery / Caldecott / Etc. 2012: Post Awards Edition

Since it’s apparently football season (or at least that’s what the trending topics on Twitter seem to imply) think of this as a kind of post-game recap of what went on yesterday in the land of ALA Media Awards.  Each year I like to look at what I got right, what I got wrong, what I got horrendously wrong, and what I got so wrong that it’s a miracle I’m even allowed to blog anymore.  And because I believe in eating my cake before my dinner, we’ll start at the top and work our way down (metaphorically speaking).

First up:

Newbery Winners: I Got Them Moves Like Gantos

When I posted my review of The Great Cake Mystery yesterday and happened to include at the end an image of Dead End in Norvelt: British Edition (called just plain old Dead End and shown here) I hadn’t even considered the possibility that the darn book was poised to win the greatest honor in the field of children’s literature.  Why had I recovered from my Gantos fever?  Well, I think Jon Scieszka put it best yesterday when he tweeted his congrats to Jack and applied the hashtag #afunnybookfinallywins.  Ye gods.  He’s right.  I ran over to ye olde list of past Award winners and while some contain elements of humor, none of them have been as outright ballsy in their funny writing as Gantos was here.  I mean, you can make a case for Despereaux or Bud Not Buddy if you want, but basically even those books drip of earnestness.  And on some level I must have figured the funny book couldn’t win.  I had forgotten myself the moniker I had applied to this year.  The Year of Breaking Barriers.  Well if giving a big award to a funny title isn’t breaking a barrier here or there, I don’t know what is.

It’s really funny to read my mid-year and fall predictions in regards to the Gantos title.  In the middle of the year I mentioned the book as a possibility but even then I wasn’t putting too much hope there.  I wrote:

This is undoubtedly wishful thinking on my part.  Gantos has never gotten the gold, and he deserves it someday.  This book, of course, has a weird undercurrent to it that may turn off a certain breed of Newbery committee member.  Not everyone is going to find Jack’s constant brushes with death as interesting as I do.  Still, I hold out hope that maybe this’ll be a Gantos-luvin’ committee year.  Stranger things have happened.

Stranger indeed.  By the fall I was mentioning it, but only in passing and with the feeling that it was an unlikely bet so that by my last prediction it had fallen off the radar entirely.

10 Comments on Newbery / Caldecott / Etc. 2012: Post Awards Edition, last added: 1/24/2012
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3. Always a Bridesmaid: The Newbery/Caldecott Honor Winning Crowd

It’s almost time for me to start thinking about my mid-year Newbery/Caldecott prediction list (also known as The Arbitrary Arbitrariness of the Arbitrariums).  In doing so my mind has been inclined to think back over the years to past winners.  In discussion with a friend the other day, the conversation turned to Jerry Pinkney.  Specifically, how for years he was the Susan Lucci of the Caldecott. Time and time again Mr. Pinkney would get Honors (no small shakes) and would be passed over for the big gold, until at long last he was lionized (so to speak).  So I wonder to myself, who are the folks you think of first when you hear the words “They wuz robbed!”?

I’m going to note that this kind of post is not really my specialty.  We are definitely in Collecting Children’s Books territory here, and my co-writer Peter Sieruta could undoubtedly give you the history of Honor Only winners throughout the years.  For my own part, here are a couple contemporary names that occurred to me:

On the Caldecott Side

Bryan Collier – His work on Dave the Potter, Rosa, and Martin’s Big Words, proves beyond a shadow of a doubt that Mr. Collier is a force to be reckoned with.  The fact that all three of these books were nonfiction fare is interesting as well.  Seems the Caldecott committees are fine with honoring nonfiction insofar as it goes, but they often stop short of giving it the shiny gold.  Not always.  But often.

Marla Frazee – Her honors are relatively new, all things considered.  Yet both All the World and A Couple of Boys Have the Best Week Ever won Honors in two consecutive years in a row.  For the Frazee fans amongst us this was a huge victory and confirmation that she is the national treasure we all knew her to be.  The gold so far has eluded her, but since her recent track record is so very good we hold out hope.

Kadir Nelson – Probably the most obvious amongst those listed here, though I had been under the impression that Nelson had received more than two Honors.  Not the case.  And while Henry’s Freedom Box and Moses got Honors, books like We Are the Ship didn’t win anything (in the Caldecott category anyway).  Now Nelson has a fall Harper Collins title called Heart and Soul: The Story of America and African Americans that may prove to win him over to the top  . . . or disappear without so much as a trace.

Mo Willems – If Kadir Nelson stretches to one side of the artistic spectrum, Mo Willems sits comfortably at the other.  Having won Honors for Knuffle Bunny, Knuffle Bunny Too, and Don’t Let the Pigeon Ride the Bus, Mo is probably the best known of any of these illustrators.  Yet while he sells like nobody’s business (and wins Geisels left and right), Caldecott committees have yet to give him the shiny shiny.

On the Newbery Side

Nancy Farmer – I wasn’t initially going to include Ms. Farmer, but then I counted the sheer number of Honors she has received.  The House of the Scorpion, A Girl Named Disaster, and The Ear, the Eye and the Arm, all garnered them, but in the last eight years she hasn

12 Comments on Always a Bridesmaid: The Newbery/Caldecott Honor Winning Crowd, last added: 5/27/2011
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