Convenor of
judges Pene Walsh said the winner of the Esther Glen Award for
Junior Fiction, Barbara Else’s The Travelling Restaurant, was outstanding. Like all of
the finalists for this award, it respected young readers’ ability to understand
humour.
“We think
Esther would be having a quiet chuckle over the selection as she was an
innovator of her time bringing amusement into her stories,” said Ms Walsh, who
manages Gisborne District Libraries.
The Esther
Glen award is one of six awarded by the Library and Information Association
(LIANZA) each year.
MC for the
Awards, and a past winner of the Esther Glen award, Kate De Goldi, dedicated
the awards to Margaret Mahy, who won the award seven times .
Judge Colleen Shipley, Librarian at Marlborough Girls
College, said the judging panel was impressed by the quality of novels
published for teenagers over the past year, but David Hair’s Pyre of Queens
stood out.
“The freshness and originality of the plot was appealing and
we became totally absorbed in the story. Strong male and female characters;
action; history and a touch of romance means there is something for everyone in
this book,” she said.
“While the appeal of trilogies and series is high for
teenagers it makes the job of a Librarian easier if a book can also stand on
its own, like this one.”
Mrs Shipley said New Zealand was also following the
international trend of many young adult books being set in an apocalyptic or
dystopian world.
Kathy Aloniu, Librarian at Dunedin City Libraries, said it
was sad to see so few entries for the Elsie Locke award for non-fiction.
“From my years of taking book talks with children, I can
tell you that quality non-fiction, presented in an interesting, vibrant,
sometimes quirky or fun way, is absolutely pounced on by children.”
Ms Aloniu said the winner of the Elsie Locke Award, Nice
Day for a War, by Chris Slane and Matt Elliott, would be a valuable
resource for schools and libraries.
“This is a book that people immediately want to share with
others and I had groups of friends and library folk crowded around poring over
every cartoon, document, postcard, poem, and illustration.”
The Russell Clark Award for Illustration was awarded post-humously
to Malcolm Ross, for Rāhui.
“Malcolm Ross has gifted an aura of another layer of
intonation in these paintings that we can only describe as mysteriously manly,
a joyous celebration of young men at play, as well as gripped in grief,” said
Ms Walsh.
Alice Heather, convenor of judges for the Te Kura Pounamu,
for which the te reo Māori version of Rāhui was shortlisted, said the
story tackled a difficult subject matter.
“The story is told with respect and aroha without being
sentimental. The illustrations open the story up to the future and invite
discussion.”
Rāhui won the inaugural Librarians’ Choice
award, voted by librarians across the country.
Ms Walsh said the medal was a chance for the profession to
give something back to the best authors in the nation.
“We are dedicated to connecting children with books. We
wanted to celebrate the authors by gifting our appreciation to one each year
from this year forth. Thank you all so much for providing touchstones for young
people.”
Te Kura Pounamu, for a book in te reo Māori, was awarded to NgāTaniwha
o te-Whanganui-a-Tara. Author Moira Wairama retells the legend of Whataitai
and Ngake, two taniwha whose bid for freedom from their lake shaped the current
landscape of Wellington harbour.
Ngā Taniwha o
te-Whanganui-a-Tara also won the Te Tohu Taurapa for te wahanga
pikitia (picture book), one of four prizes awarded by Te Rōpū Whakahau, the
organisation for Māori Librarians.
Ms Heather, Māori Advisor for School Services at the
National Library in Auckland, said it was disappointing to see less than half
the usual amount of books in te reo Māori entered for the awards.
“There weren’t any non-fiction titles, which may be due to
the lack of Ministry of Education contracts to produce non-fiction for schools.
For children to grow up with te reo Māori as their first language it is
essential to have the world around them explained in their own language. They
need non-fiction books to do this.”
Te Poiwhana by Te Kauhoe Wano won the Te Tohu
Ngā Kete e toru for te wahanga pukapuka paki (fiction). Ms Heather said the
book, about a soccer-mad boy whose father wants him to play rugby, had a great
message for young Māori about following their dreams.
She said it was an honour to award the Te Tohu Pounamu,
which recognises excellence that would not otherwise be recognised in the other
award categories, to translator Dame Katerina Mataira.
“Last year I acknowledged the wonderful contribution that
Katerina Mataira had made to the Māori literary world at the time of her
passing. Well her contribution continues because we would like to award this to
Katerina one last time for her translation of the book Kei Wareware tātou.
This is the seventh year Katerina has been a translator for a book short-listed
in the LIANZA Children’s Book Awards.”
LIANZA received over 110 nominations for the 2012 awards.
The LIANZA Children’s Book
Award 2012 Winners:
LIANZA Junior Fiction Award – Esther Glen Medal
The Travelling Restaurant by Barbara Else, (GECKO
Press). Else lives in Lower Hutt and works as a writer, editor and literary
agent.
LIANZA Young Adult Fiction Award
Pyre of Queens by David Hair, (Penguin NZ)
Hair lives in Wellington and writes around his work in
financial services. He was inspired to write this novel by the time he spent
living in India.
LIANZA Illustration Award - Russell Clark Award
Rāhui by Chris Szekely and Malcolm Ross,
(Huia). Szekely lives in Wellington and is Chief Librarian at the Alexander
Turnbull Library. He worked with Ross (now deceased) 20 years ago in the School
Services department of the National Library. This book is based on their
memories of holidays at the beach with whānau.
LIANZA Non Fiction Award – Elsie Locke Medal
Nice Day for a War by Chris Slane and Matt Elliott,
illustrated by Chris Slane (HarperCollins Publishers (NZ) Ltd). Slane is a
cartoonist. Elliott is a comedian, historian and biographer. This book tells
the story of Elliott’s grandfather during World War I. Slane and Elliott live
in Auckland.
Te Kura
Pounamu (te reo Māori)
Ngā Taniwha i te-Whanga-nui-a-Tara by Moira Wairama
and Bruce Potter, (Penguin NZ).
Wairama is a storyteller,writer, poet, playwright, puppeteer
and teacher who loves to bring Māori legends to life. This myth was first told
to her by Tipene O’Regan and she has been telling it to audiences for 30 years.
She has only seen the myth referred to on paper, so she was inspired to write
it down to ensure future generations of Wellingtonians could read it. Wairama
lives in Wellington.
The winner of each category was awarded a medal or taonga
and $1,000.
Librarians’ Choice Award
Rāhui by Chris Szekely and Malcolm Ross,
(Huia).
Te Ropu Whakahau (organisation for Māori Librarians)Award
Winners
Te Tohu Taurapa for te wahanga pikitia (picture
book)
Ngā Taniwha i te Whanga-nui-a-Tara by Moira Wairama and Bruce Potter, (Penguin NZ).
Ngā Taniwha i te Whanga-nui-a-Tara by Moira Wairama and Bruce Potter, (Penguin NZ).
Te Tohu Ngā Kete e toru for te wahanga pukapuka paki
(fiction)
Te Poiwhana by Te Kauhoe Wano and Andrew Burdan, (Huia).
Te Poiwhana by Te Kauhoe Wano and Andrew Burdan, (Huia).
Te Tohu Pounamu
Kei Wareware tātou
translated by Katerina Mataira, written by Feana Tu’akoi and illustrated by
Elspeth Alix Batt (Scholastic). Katerina Mataira died in 2011, shortly after
being created Dame Companion of the New Zealand Order of Merit for her services
to Māori language.
Te Tohu Hoani Te Whatuhoro Jury for te wahanga
pukapuka pono (non- fiction)
Not awarded due to lack of entries.
Not awarded due to lack of entries.
Footnote:
The LIANZA Children’s Book Awards 2012 are supported by
Fishpond.co.nz, Caffe L’affare and The Children’s Bookshop, Kilbirnie,
Wellington.
Esther Glen
was a journalist, children’s writer and community worker who lived in Christchurch.
She died in 1940 and the Esther Glen award was established in her honour in
1945. Her book Six little New Zealanders is being translated into German
this year as part of the celebrations around New Zealand being the guest of
honour at the Frankfurt Book Fair.
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