National Book Award for Young People’s Literature Longlist Announced

2011_nbafinalist_medalThis year, for the first time, the National Book Foundation is announcing longlists of 10 books in each of its award categories: Fiction, Non-Fiction, Poetry and Young People’s Literature. Monday’s announcement was the Young People’s Literature Longlist and as a young adult librarian currently and a youth services librarian previously, this is the list that most interested me personally. For the last few years, the Young People’s Literature Shortlists have skewed heavily towards young adult literature rather than children’s literature, but this year’s Longlist looks like it has a pretty good balance. The only one I’ve read so far is The Summer Prince which I adored, so I’m looking forward to reading the rest. The Algonquin Area Public Library either owns or has most of these on order, so stop on in to check them out or to place a hold! Let us know in the comments if there’s any of these you’re excited to see on the list or a favorite author you think was overlooked. Plus, what do you want to see make the 5 book shortlist?

The 2013 National Book Award for Young People’s Literature Longlist

The True Blue Scouts of Sugar Man Swamp by Kathi Appelttruebluescouts

Kathi Appelt’s first novel, The Underneath took home a Newbery Honor and with her return to a swamp setting, I’m not surprised to see this latest effort make the longlist.

 

Flora and Ulysses: The Illuminated Adventures by Kate DiCamillofloraulysses

Kate DiCamillo isn’t the most prolific author out there, but she’s already racked up quite the list of awards including a Newbery Honor, a National Book Shortlist, a Geisel Honor, A Geisel Medal, and a Boston Globe-Horn Book Award for Fiction. Release date for this one is September 24th.

tangleofknotsA Tangle of Knots by Lisa Graff

Most of Lisa Graff’s previous books have been solidly mid-list crowd pleasers, well received by children, but ignored by award committees. It’s nice to see her get some awards recognition!

The Summer Prince by Alaya Dawn Johnsonsummerprince

See my previous post for more details about my love for this one. Part of what’s so impressive to me is that this is Johnson’s first novel specifically for the young adult market, but she manages to capture the feel of being on the cusp of adulthood brilliantly.

thingaboutluckThe Thing About Luck by Cynthia Kadohata

Kadohata’s first book for children won the Newbery Medal and The Thing About Luck has been getting uniformly wonderful reviews, so no surprise to see this one make the cut.

Two Boys Kissing by David Levithantwoboyskissing

The reviews on this latest David Levithan title have been mixed, but since I loved Boy Meets Boy I’m looking forward to reading this one when it comes in although it sounds like it’s got a very different tone.

farfarawayFar Far Away by Tom McNeal

Another title that’s been getting fantastic reviews, Far Far Away has an intriguing concept: Jeremy Johnson Johnson can communicate with the ghost of Jacob Grimm and soon finds himself at the center of a string of disappearances in town.

 

Picture Me Gone by Meg Rosoffpicturemegone

Meg Rosoff won the Printz Award for her debut novel how i live now back in 2005 (the movie adaptation will be out this November) and while responses to her works have been varied since then, this one has been getting some good buzz. Picture Me Gone is due out October 3rd, so place your holds now!

realboyThe Real Boy by Anne Ursu

Ursu’s last novel Breadcrumbs got quite a bit of Newbery buzz although it had its detractors. I liked it, but thought it had some issues. With The Real Boy (due out September 24th) Ursu returns to fantasy but this time focuses on a main character that some have identified as being on the autism spectrum – an interesting twist that the National Book Award jury seems to feel pays off.

Boxers and Saints by Gene Luen Yangboxers

It’s interesting that the jury chose to name this as one book since it’s published in two volumes. Yang’s graphic novels explore the Boxer Rebellion in China from both sides of the conflict. In Boxers we follow Little Bao who leads the rebellion. In Saints we see things from the viewpoint of Vibiana, one of the Chinese Christians persecuted by the rebellion. saintsYang takes historical fiction and adds touches of magical realism. This is the one title our library doesn’t own so feel free to place a hold and we’ll request it from another library!

 

The Summer Prince by Alaya Dawn Johnson

Before I get into the meat of my first post here at our Reading Corner, let me introduce myself! I’m Jen Jazwinski, also known as Ms. Jen by some of our younger patrons, and I’m the Young Adult Librarian here at the Algonquin Area Public Library. My focus is on working with teens and young adults and you’ll see me at the Adult Reference Desk sometimes. I love to read young adult and children’s literature, but I also love almost anything genre – particularly regency romances, mysteries, paranormals and fantasy. Two things my favorite books almost always have are at least a little humor and some well defined female characters. I’m starting off here with a young adult book published this year that I absolutely adored – on to The Summer Prince!

June Costa is 18 years old and obsessed with becoming the best artist in Palmares Três – a pyramid city in what used to be Brazil before the Y Plague wiped out 70 percent of the male population, before the dirty bombs, before the nuclear wars and the freezing and the southern migrations. Older women called Aunties rule in Palmares Três. After all, look what male rulers did to the world. Palmares Três has a King only once every five years. At the end of a king year, the king is sacrificed and with his dying breath names the new Queen with word or gesture in a ritual that has lasted for hundreds of years. This year’s Summer King is Enki – Enki who is only 18 years old, Enki whose skin is darker than the gene modifications are supposed to allow, Enki from the verde – the lowest level of the pyramid city, Enki who June and her best friend Gil adore from afar until they actually meet and sparks fly. By the time Enki, June, and Gil are done, they and Palmares Três will never be the same.

To understand the world of Palmares Três takes work, but it’s well worth it. Johnson naturally reveals clues to how society has recreated itself following apocalyptic events through June’s thoughts and feelings as she starts to better understand her place in her city. Palmares Três has a vibrant culture with roots in Brazil, Africa, Japan, Catholicism, and Candomblé and the evolution of language as depicted here plays with all those cultures – verde for the algae infested lower pyramid tiers, kiri for assisted suicide, waka for the young people, grande for the older people. Johnson manages to convey all this without info dumps and still keeps June’s character as a privileged Tier 8 teenager consistent. June is far from perfect – easily caught up in how she’s perceived, particularly as an artist, constantly faltering from her ideals, resentful of her mother and her mother’s new wife, but June’s also open to new ideas, a thoughtful artist, brave and intelligent – even if she’s almost always a step behind Enki and the Aunties.

Like all the best science fiction, Johnson tackles big ideas and sticky issues. Johnson extrapolates on how society as a whole might change with certain advances. For example, what would it look like if lives were extended so that people could live for 200 years? Adulthood might come later and teenagers might be feared and controlled even more than they are now. Assisted suicide might become an accepted choice for those who feel they cannot continue their lives through such a span. Johnson also tackles issues we face today such as how big a role technology should play in our lives. Should the government be in control of how much and what kinds of technology are available? When does technology become detrimental to life? When does using outdated technology become unacceptably dangerous? Johnson ably presents multiple viewpoints, showing that while technology is one type of tool, neither good nor evil, it is a dangerously powerful tool that can be used in service to both.

What’s amazing is that these are only a fraction of the topics Johnson explores – there’s also the power of art and music, the myth of matriarchal societies automatically being altruistic, and socioeconomic justice. All while giving us characters that are true to life and easy to sympathize with even when their actions are reprehensible. All while keeping track of a plot that twists and turns. All from a debut novelist. So, yeah – I loved this book – and I hope someone else out there has read it, because I’d love to talk with you about these meaty themes and what you think is next for June and Alaya Dawn Johnson!

If The Summer Prince sounds fantastic to you, here’s a couple other titles to check out:

Feed by M.T. Anderson

feed“We went to the moon to have fun, but the moon turned out to completely suck.” So begins M.T. Anderson’s futuristic story of consumerist teens with computer feeds directly wired into their brains. Bombarded with information and commercials every second of the day, Titus lives for his feed. Then he meets Violet who wants to fight the feed and everything changes.

Ship Breaker by Paolo Bacigalupi

shipbreakerCopper wiring, aluminum, nickel, even steel clips and tiny staples – this is the “treasure” Nailer’s light scavenge crew sweats and scrapes to retrieve from the hulking wrecks of tanker ships. Ship breaking is a hard life, the crew face possible death or permanent injury every day, but it puts at least a meager amount of food in their mouths. Nailer hates scavenge work and avoids his druggie father, but he gets by as best he can even as he worries about what he’ll do when he gets too big for the tight spaces that hold the best scavenge. Everyone dreams of the lucky strike that might take them to the top of the ship breaking heap or even away from the destroyed beachfront, but lucky strikes are one in a million. Then, after a hurricane, Nailer finds the fanciest storm-wrecked ship he’s ever seen – days before anyone else knows it exists. With scavenge from this lucky strike he could be set for life. Only one thing stands in his way: Nita – the one survivor of the shipwreck – a swank, beautiful girl. Inspired by real Bangladeshi ship breakers, Bacigalupi has created a fascinating, near-future world devastatingly changed by technology and ecology in ways that seem quite possible.

Ready Player One by Ernest Cline

readyplayeroneWade Watts spends as much time as possible in the virtual world of the OASIS, and he spends a lot of that time trying to figure out the puzzle that Halliday, creator of the OASIS left behind. Whoever solves that puzzle will be given control of OASIS and since most of the world spends it’s time there, that control will equal enormous power. When Wade stumbles across the first challenge, it’s not long before competitors the world over are after him – including a nefarious corporation – and the race is on. Steeped in the culture of the 1980s, Ready Player One is a particularly fun listen with narration from Wil Wheaton.

The True Meaning of Smekday by Adam Rex
smekdayA story of the alien invasion that focuses on Gratuity “Tip” Tucci and renegade Boov mechanic J.Lo and their road trip across the U.S., The True Meaning of Smekday made me laugh more than any other science fiction story I’ve read while still making me think. The hardest part is trying to decide whether to recommend the book with it’s hilarious illustrations or the audiobook with masterful narration from Bahni Turpin – in the end, I say grab both and flip back and forth as needed!