Meg Medina wins Newbery medal
Meg Medina, the latest recipient of the John Newbery Medal, wrote her prize-winning children’s book with a special intensity.
“There are so many negative characterizations these days of Latino families and what it is to be an immigrant,” said Medina, a Cuban-American author whose “Merci Suarez Changes Gears” tells of an 11-year-old’s struggles as she navigates between the worlds of her elite private school and her extended Latino family.
“This toxic conversation about immigration and who’s dangerous and who’s American absorbs us all. I feel this enormous pressure to provide a counternarrative.”
The Newbery medal is given for “outstanding contribution to children’s literature.” Sophie Blackall’s “Hello Lighthouse,” in which the natural world is seen through the eyes of a lighthouse keeper, received the Randolph Caldecott Medal for best picture book.
The awards, the year’s most anticipated in the children’s books community, were announced last week by the American Library Association.
Claire Hartfield’s “A Few Red Drops: The Chicago Race Riot of 1919” won the Coretta Scott King author award for African-American literature, while Ekua Holmes was given the King illustrator award. Elizabeth Acevedo’s “The Poet X,” winner last fall of the National Book Award for young people’s literature, received the Michael L. Printz Award for best young adult novel and the Pura Belpre author award for Latino literature. The Belpre award for illustration went to Yuyi Morales for “Dreamers.” Tara Westover’s best-selling memoir “Educated” was among 10 winners of the Alex Award for adult works appealing to teen readers.