Winners Announced for the 2015
New Zealand Book Awards for Children and Young Adults
A beautifully told story of hope
and promise set in the tranquillity of the Marlborough Sounds, spanning issues
of environment, conservation and relationships is the winner of this year’s
Margaret Mahy Book of the Year Award, in the prestigious New Zealand Book
Awards for Children and Young Adults. Singing
Home the Whale is also the winner in the Awards’ Young Adult Fiction
category.
Mandy Hager’s book Singing Home the Whale (published by
Penguin Random House NZ) tells the story of Will, a teenage boy, and Min, a
young orca. Singing Gilbert & Sullivan from the back of a boat in the
Sounds, Will is heard by Min, who has
been separated from his pod after seeing his mother killed by whalers. It’s the
union of two souls that will last a
lifetime.
Judging Panel Convenor Bob
Docherty says that Singing Home the Whale
stood out as relevant, timeless and extraordinarily powerful. “We think this
novel would have won in any year it was entered, and the decision was unanimous
for the panel. Mandy Hager is writing out of her skin at present and her
understanding of the human condition and human attitudes towards each other and
other inhabitants of Planet Earth are beautifully presented. This novel should
be compulsory reading in any country that still hunts whales. The alternating
narrative by Will and Min is captivating and believable, as well as easy to
read.”
The 2015 Judging Panel was
convened by Bob Docherty, children’s book reviewer and literary consultant;
author and children’s bookshop owner, Annemarie Florian; and teacher-librarian
Fiona Mackie; with the assistance of Te Reo Māori language adviser, freelance
Māori writer and editor Stephanie Pohe-Tibble.
The winners of the 2015 New
Zealand Book Awards for Children and Young Adults were announced at a ceremony
at Wellington’s Government House on Thursday, 13 August. The Awards promote
excellence and provide recognition for the best written and illustrated books for
children and young adults published by New Zealand authors each year.
Best
Picture Book was awarded to Jim’s
Letters, by Glyn Harper, illustrated by Jenny Cooper. Based on
the relationship between two brothers and their correspondence during World War
1, this book is a heart-wrenching story, testament to the pre-internet written
word as a means of recording and retelling history. The judges say Jim’s Letters has exceptional balance,
pacing and design.
Rotorua
author Donovan Bixley wins the Best Junior Fiction award with Monkey Boy. A
‘rollicking read’ say the judges, Monkey
Boy has mixed history with the supernatural and scatological, as well as
Donovan Bixley’s trademark humorous illustrations.
The Best
Non-Fiction category winner is Mōtītī
Blue and the Oil Spill, by Debbie McCauley and Tamati Waaka (Translation). Using
narrative devices and compelling design, this book tells the story in both
English and Māori of little blue penguin Mōtītī Blue’s struggle after being
trapped in the Rena oil spill. The judges praise the story for its power, and
for its photography, layout and pertinent factual background.
Ngā Kī, by Sacha Cotter, translated by Kawata
Teepa (Ngai Tuhoe, Te Arawa)
and illustrated by Josh Morgan wins the Māori Language award. Beautifully
capturing a child’s voice, Ngā Kī conveys
the special relationship between a father and his daughter. Te Reo Māori
language adviser Stephanie Pohe-Tibble says that Kawata Teepa demonstrates his
ability to draw from te ao Māori
(traditional Māori world) and te auo hou (modern
world) in his use of metaphor and descriptive language.
The Best
First Book Award winner is Julie Noanoa, for Māori Art for Kids. The judges commend this book
for its combination of excellent production values and outstanding content.
“With a uniquely New Zealand perspective, Māori
Art for Kids gives the reader information that no other book currently
provides. We look forward to more from Julie, as this book is of a very high
quality.”
The full list of winners of the
2015 New Zealand Book Awards for Children and Young Adults is:
·
Margaret
Mahy Book of the Year and winner of Best Young Adult Fiction category
Prizes:
$7,500 for the Margaret Mahy Book of the Year and $7,500 for Best Young Adult
Fiction
Singing Home the Whale, by
Mandy Hager (Penguin Random House NZ)
·
Best Picture Book: Prize
$7,500
Jim’s Letters, by Glyn
Harper, illustrated by Jenny Cooper (Penguin Random House NZ (Puffin))
·
Best Non-Fiction: Prize
$7,500
Mōtītī Blue and the Oil Spill, by
Debbie McCauley and Tamati Waaka (translation) (Mauāo Press)
·
Best Junior Fiction: Prize
$7,500
Monkey Boy, by
Donovan Bixley (Scholastic NZ)
·
Māori Language Award: Prize
$1,000
Ngā Kī,
translation by Kawata Teepa (Ngai Tuhoe, Te Arawa) of Keys by Sacha Cotter, illustrated by Josh Morgan (Huia Publishers)
·
Best First Book: Prize
$2,000
Māori Art for Kids, by
Julie Noanoa (Potton & Burton)
In this year’s newly revamped
Children’s Choice Award, nearly 16,000 votes were cast by children to select
the winners from their own specially selected finalists’ list. The 2015
Children’s Choice winners are:
·
Picture
Book: The Anzac Puppy by Peter
Millett, illustrated by Trish Bowles (Scholastic NZ)
·
Non-Fiction:
The Letterbox Cat & Other
Poems by Paula
Green, illustrated by Myles Lawford (Scholastic NZ)
·
Junior Fiction Winner:Island of
Lost Horses by Stacy Gregg (HarperCollins).
·
Young Adult Fiction:Night
Vision by Ella West (Allen & Unwin)
Each book wins $1,000.
Bob Docherty says that such
impressive books meet our natural hunger to immerse ourselves in a story or a
subject and really connect – an opportunity that is often neglected in our
haste to simply uplift information from the internet or an online book. “The
quality of all the entries was outstanding and this is an encouraging sign for
the longevity of the book in its printed form. All the submitted books were
highly appealing, tangible and tactile, and a real delight to read and digest.
As judges we were privileged to have had the opportunity to read and judge all
these books. The demand for stunning books is clearly there, and the future of
publishing in New Zealand looks healthy.”
The New Zealand Book Awards for Children and Young Adults are
organised by the New Zealand Book Awards Trust, and administered by Booksellers
NZ. The Awards are sponsored by Creative NZ, Book Tokens Ltd, Copyright
Licensing Limited New Zealand, the Fernyhough Education Foundation and Nielsen
Book. Publishers have also supported the awards this year.
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