Many
of the books submitted dealt with serious issues. “War featured highly,
alongside other topical themes like teenage pregnancy, surveillance, abuse,
homelessness, racial tensions and bullying. Coming-of-age stories and
characters that are living with extended family members highlighted the meaning
of family and love,” Pam Jones says.
The finalists in the
2017 New Zealand Book Awards for Children and Young Adults are selected across
six categories: Picture Book, Junior Fiction, Young Adult Fiction, Non-Fiction,
Illustration and te reo Māori; and the Best First Book category. There were 152
entries submitted for the 2017 awards.
This
year, Copyright Licensing NZ (CLNZ) is the new sponsor for the Young Adult
Fiction Award. CLNZ helps the owners of published content to earn a living from their
work by licensing copying from books, journals, magazines and newspapers by
schools and other education and commercial organisations. The licence revenue
generated by CLNZ is a valuable source of income for authors and publishers.
CLNZ’s CEO Paula Browning says, “Celebrating great New Zealand books and
supporting New Zealand authors is at the heart of what we do. We are delighted
to contribute to the New Zealand Book Awards for Children and Young Adults by
sponsoring the Copyright Licensing NZ Young Adult Fiction Award.”
An integral part of the New Zealand Book Awards for
Children and Young Adults is the HELL
Reading Challenge, now in its fourth year. It has been hugely successful in
getting kids reading and enjoying the pleasure of stories – with the bonus of
free pizza rewards from HELL Pizza.
HELL
Pizza general manager Ben Cumming says the company has a very strong commitment
to get kids hooked on books. “Reading is cool again and we want pizza to be a
means of encouraging kids to read heaps of books. In 2016, 200,000 pizza wheels
were distributed and more than 1 million books were read by Kiwi kids as a
result. This year we want even more young readers to discover the thrill of a
great book, and we’re aiming to circulate over 250,000 wheels. With 600 schools
and libraries already registered and more than 175,000 pizza wheels already distributed,
that target is looking easily achievable.”
The
HELL Reading Challenge opened on 1 March and closes on Sunday, 3 December.
The
judging panel for the 2017 New Zealand
Book Awards for Children and Young Adults comprises children and young
adults librarian, Pam Jones (convenor); education lecturer, Trish Brooking;
author Ben Brown; reviewer
and promoter of New Zealand children’s literature, Sarah
Forster; and WORD Christchurch programme director and author, Rachael King. For
the second year, the panel is joined by English academic, Professor Martin
Salisbury who is the advisor for the Russell Clark Illustration Award.
Professor Salisbury is the Professor of Illustration at Anglia Ruskin
University in Cambridge, UK and leads its MA Children’s Book Illustration
programme. He has been a member of the international jury for a number of
illustration and picture book awards.
The te reo Māori entries were judged
by University of Auckland Kaitaiki Māori librarian, Riki-Lee Saua (convenor);
Anahera Morehu, Library Manager Arts, Māori, and Pasifika Services at the
University of Auckland Libraries and Learning Services; Principal Librarian Children’s and Young Adult Services at the HB
Williams Memorial Library, Gisborne, Te Rangi Rangi Tangohau; and Rongo Waerea,
the Māori Services Librarian at Auckland’s Otara
Library.
In the Picture Book Award the judges were delighted to see stories about
people as well as animals, and they liked the way these authors wove in gentle
messages for younger readers that delved beneath the stop story. “Caterpillars,
dinosaurs, Amazonian penguins, a bad case of mistaken identity and magical
dolphins; this list has it all.”
The Esther Glen Award for Junior Fiction
finalists will capture the imagination of every young reader, either immersing
them in another world or reality, giving them a problem or mystery to solve or
causing a laugh-out-loud response to witty conversations. “We’re pleased to see
these books feature an equal mix of strong male and female characters from different
races, ethnicities and backgrounds,” say the judges.
The judges enjoyed
delving into the world of teenagers via the books entered for the Copyright Licensing NZ Award for Young
Adult Fiction. “We immersed ourselves in the issues that plague young people—family,
school pressures, relationship woes, sexuality and the looming adult world.
Authors are not afraid to explore dark themes, but also to inject humour when
it’s needed.” The Elsie Locke Award for Non-Fiction category attracted a variety of entries with topics ranging from bugs to biographies, and history to habitats. The judges note that a clear integration of text, graphics and illustrations meant that all books in this category attained a high quality of overall design.
The judges say the Russell Clark Award for Illustration was
a rich category from which to choose the finalists with illustrators working in
a range of media including paint, collage, drawing and digital illustration.
“The finalists are a strong and diverse group, with a lot of talent and love
for craft on display. It was a pleasure to reward such beautiful work.”
This year’s Te Kura Pounamu Award for te reo Māori
had a record number of entries. Convenor of judges Riki-Lee Saua says, “Each
finalist stood out for their inspiring and relevant content, stunning
illustrations and excellence in the quality of Māori language.”
The judges selected
five books as finalists for the Best
First Book Award; this is the first year that Best First Book finalists
have been announced. Pam Jones says, “The judges were impressed with the
calibre of writing from first-time authors and the increased number of
first-published works entered. Noted particularly were the authors who had
sought the wisdom and guidance of well-established writers. It’s great to see
successful writers pass on their experience to help grow a richer children’s
literary scene in New Zealand.”
The finalists for the 2017 New Zealand Book Awards
for Children and Young Adults are:
Picture
Book Award
Fuzzy
Doodle, Melinda Szymanik, illustrated by Donovan Bixley,
Scholastic NZ
Gwendolyn!
Juliette
MacIver, illustrated by Terri Rose Baynton, HarperCollins Publishers (ABC)
My
Grandpa is a Dinosaur, Richard Fairgray and Terry Jones,
illustrated by Richard Fairgray, Penguin Random House (Puffin)
That’s
Not a Hippopotamus! Juliette MacIver, illustrated by Sarah
Davis, Gecko Press
The
Singing Dolphin/Te Aihe i Waiata, Mere Whaanga,
Scholastic NZ
Esther
Glen Award for Junior Fiction
Helper
and Helper, Joy Cowley, illustrated by Gavin
Bishop, Gecko Press
My
New Zealand Story: Bastion Point, Tania Roxborogh,
Scholastic NZ
Sunken
Forest, Des Hunt, Scholastic NZ
The
Discombobulated Life of Summer Rain, Julie Lamb, Mākaro
Press (Submarine)
The
Impossible Boy, Leonie Agnew, Penguin Random House
(Puffin)
Kiwis
at War 1916: Dig for victory, David Hair,
Scholastic NZ
Like
Nobody’s Watching, LJ Ritchie, Escalator Press
Shooting
Stars, Brian Falkner, Scholastic NZ
The
Severed Land, Maurice Gee, Penguin Random House
(Penguin)
Elsie
Locke Award for Non-Fiction
From
Moa to Dinosaurs: Explore & discover ancient New Zealand, Gillian
Candler, illustrated by Ned Barraud, Potton & Burton
Jack
and Charlie: Boys of the bush, Josh James Marcotte
and Jack Marcotte, Penguin Random House (Puffin)
The
Cuckoo and the Warbler, Kennedy Warne, illustrated by
Heather Hunt, Potton & Burton
The
Genius of Bugs, Simon Pollard, Museum of New Zealand
Te Papa Tongarewa (Te Papa Press)
Torty
and the Soldier, Jennifer Beck, illustrated by Fifi
Colston, Scholastic NZ
Russell
Clark Award for Illustration
Fuzzy
Doodle, illustrated by Donovan Bixley, written by Melinda
Szymanik, Scholastic NZ
Gladys
Goes to War, illustrated by Jenny Cooper, written
by Glyn Harper, Penguin Random House (Puffin)
If
I Was a Banana, illustrated by Kieran Rynhart, written
by Alexandra Tylee, Gecko Press
Snark:
Being a true history of the expedition that discovered the Snark and the
Jabberwock . . . and its tragic aftermath, illustrated
and written by David Elliot (after Lewis Carroll), Otago University Press
The
Day the Costumes Stuck, illustrated and written by Toby
Morris, Beatnik Publishing
Te
Kura Pounamu Award for books written completely in te reo Māori
Ngā
Manu Tukutuku e Whitu o Matariki, Calico McClintock,
illustrated by Dominique Ford, translated by Ngaere Roberts, Scholastic NZ
Ngārara
Huarau, Maxine Hemi, Illustrated by Andrew Burdan, Huia
Publishers
Te
Haerenga Māia a Riripata i Te Araroa, Maris O’Rourke,
illustrated by Claudia Pond Eyley, translated by Āni Wainui, David Ling
Publishing (Duck Creek Press)
Te
Kaihanga Māpere, Sacha Cotter, illustrated by Josh
Morgan, translated by Kawata Teepa, Huia Publishers
Tuna
rāua ko Hiriwa, Ripeka Takotowai Goddard, illustrated
by Kimberly Andrews, Huia Publishers
Best
First Book Award.
Awatea’s
Treasure, Fraser Smith, Huia Publishers
Like
Nobody’s Watching, LJ Ritchie, Escalator Press
The
Discombobulation of Summer Rain, Julie Lamb, Mākaro
Press (Submarine)
The
Mouse and the Octopus, written and illustrated by
Lisala Halapua, Talanoa Books
Wars
in the Whitecloud: Wairau, 1843, written and
illustrated by Matthew H McKinley, Kin PublishingFinalist Author Events
Young readers will
have a chance to meet the finalist authors in early August, at three big
events. The first is in Christchurch (Monday, 7 August in association with WORD
Christchurch); then in Dunedin (Friday and Saturday, 11-12 August in association
with Dunedin Public Libraries and UBS Otago); and finally in Wellington (Monday,
14 August).
The winners of the
2017 New Zealand Book Awards for Children and Young Adults will be announced on
the evening of Monday, 14 August in Wellington.The New Zealand Book Awards for Children & Young Adults are made possible through the generosity, commitment and vision of funders and sponsors: Creative New Zealand, HELL Pizza, Book Tokens (NZ) Ltd, Copyright Licensing NZ, LIANZA, Wellington City Council and Nielsen Book. The awards are administered for the New Zealand Book Awards Trust by the New Zealand Book Council.
No comments:
Post a Comment