Arab Times

Jerry Craft and Kadir Nelson win honors for children’s books

Yiyun Li and Leslie Jamison among PEN award nominees

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NEW YORK, Jan 29, (AP): Jerry Craft’s “New Kid”, a graphic novel about a 7th grader’s struggle to adjust to a private school with little diversity, has won the John Newbery Medal for the year’s best children’s book. “New Kid” also received the Coretta Scott King Award for an outstandin­g work by an African American writer.

Kadir Nelson won the Randolph Caldecott Medal for his illustrati­on of “The Undefeated”, a poetic tribute to African American history, featuring the words of Kwame Alexander. “The Undefeated” was also a runner-up for the Newbery prize, won by Alexander in 2015 for “The Crossover”, and won the Coretta Scott King prize for best illustrate­d book.

The prizes were announced Monday by the American Library Associatio­n during its annual midwinter meeting, held this year in Philadelph­ia.

Other winners include A.S. King’s “Dig”, named the outstandin­g young adult novel, and Colson Whitehead’s novel “The Nickel Boys”, cited as one of 10 books for adults that appealed to young people. Lifetime achievemen­t prizes were given to Kevin Henkes, whose books include “Kitten’s First Full Moon”, and Steve Sheinkin, author of such historical works as “The Port Chicago 50” and “The Notorious Benedict Arnold.”

Carlos Hernandez’s “Sal and Gabi Break the Universe” was the Pura Belpré Author Award winner for an outstandin­g Latino writer. Rafael Lopez received the Belpre illustrato­r prize for “Dancing Hands: How Teresa Carreño Played the Piano for President Lincoln”. American Indian Youth Literature awards were given to “Bowwow Powwow: Bagosenjig­e-niimi’idim” and illustrato­r Jonathan Thunder for best picture book and to “Hearts Unbroken”, written by Cynthia Leitich Smith, for best young adult book.

Some writers from the outside book world also were honored. Supreme Court Justice Sonia Sotomayor won the Schneider Family Book Award for books that “embody an artistic expression of the disability experience.” Her book, “Just Ask! Be Different, Be Brave, Be You”, illustrate­d by Rafael López, was inspired in part on her battle with diabetes.

George Takei of “Star Trek” fame shared a prize for best young adult literature by an author of Asian Pacific background. He, Justin Eisinger and Steven Scott co-wrote “They Called Us Enemy”, a graphic memoir based on Takei’s being held in a detention camp for Japanese Americans during World War II.

NEW YORK:

and

Also:

Fiction by and essays by and

are among the finalists for honors presented by PEN America, the literary and human rights organizati­on.

On Tuesday, PEN announced nominees in categories ranging from science and poetry to translatio­n and debut novel. Winners will be announced March 2, at a ceremony hosted by Judges for PEN include such celebrated writers as in Logar”, Familia”, Travelers” and “A Prayer for Travelers”. For the PEN/Robert W. Bingham award, for best debut short story collection, the nominees are “The Trojan War Museum”, “Sabrina “Last of

“Big “The & Corina”, Her Name”, “Home Remedies” and

“Lot”. Babitz, the Hollywood chronicler who has had a resurgence of interest in recent years, is a nominee for a $10,000 prize for “the art of the essay.” She was cited for “I Used to Be Charming: The Rest of Eve Babitz”. The other finalists are Jamison’s “Make It Scream, Make It Burn”,

“Resurrecti­on of the Wild” and a pair of books by New Yorker staff writers – “I Like To Watch” and

“Trick Mirror”. This story has been corrected to show that one of the judge’s names is Camille Rankine, not

 ??  ?? This combinatio­n of photos shows ‘New Kid’ by Jerry Craft, a graphic novel about a 7th grader’s struggle to adjust to a private school with little diversity (left), and ‘The Undefeated’, by Kadir Nelson, a poetic tribute to African
American history, featuring the words of Kwame Alexander. (AP)
This combinatio­n of photos shows ‘New Kid’ by Jerry Craft, a graphic novel about a 7th grader’s struggle to adjust to a private school with little diversity (left), and ‘The Undefeated’, by Kadir Nelson, a poetic tribute to African American history, featuring the words of Kwame Alexander. (AP)

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