Children's Books discussion
The Newbery Club
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It Should Have Won a Newbery!
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How many of these nominations by ALA folk do you agree with?
I'm going to have to read more to find out what I might admire besides Tuck Everlasting and Frindle. Some seem vaguely familiar so maybe they, like Jip and Autumn Street, would be easier for me to find.
I'm going to have to read more to find out what I might admire besides Tuck Everlasting and Frindle. Some seem vaguely familiar so maybe they, like Jip and Autumn Street, would be easier for me to find.

I've requested a few. Turns out more than I expected are available.
My son and I did both enjoy our rereads of Tuck Everlasting last month.
My son and I did both enjoy our rereads of Tuck Everlasting last month.
Books mentioned in this topic
The Endless Steppe: Growing Up in Siberia (other topics)The Goats (other topics)
Stone Fox (other topics)
Tree in the Trail (other topics)
Scooter (other topics)
More...
https://www.ala.org/aboutala/offices/...
... If you haven't become acquainted with these titles, get ready for some wonderful reading. --Ed.
[If you can find them!]
Tuck Everlasting [needs no support, imo; I assume you are all familiar with it (though the movie is *very* different and worse, accd. to my smart adult son)].
--Beth Warrell, assistant editor
The Folk Keeper
Corinna Stonewall is stubborn, cunning, and fiercely territorial in her situation as Folk Keeper, protecting the household from the fearsome Folk who live in the darkness below ground. But when she takes a new station on a wealthy estate by the sea, the Folk there prove to be more dangerous than she's ever known before... selkie folklore ....
--Laura Tillotson, editor
Frindle
[Again, I hope you know this, or at least know [author:Andrew Clements|63095]. I'm due for a reread of it. I think of it as, a bit, like Nothing But the Truth but for younger kids.]
--Judy Moburg, advisory board member
The Goats
[Controversial and I, personally, am not interested.]
--Stephanie Zvirin, Booklist Books for Youth editor
Stone Fox
[A very short book that I've seen in many many classrooms.]
--Judy Nelson, advisory board member
The Endless Steppe: Growing Up in Siberia
First published in 1968 and now a classic...
--Randall Enos, advisory board member
Tree in the Trail
... can easily be used to expand a study of U.S. history.... tells the history of the Great Plains and the Santa Fe Trail through the life and times of a lone cottonwood tree. I remember boys in my grade-school class being fascinated by the details of what it took to build a yoke for oxen... a text expanded with beautiful illlustrations.
--Mary D. Lankford, advisory board member
When Zachary Beaver Came to Town tells what happens in the small town of Antler, Texas, after the arrival of Zachary Beaver, a 600-pound teenage sideshow act who is subsequently abandoned by his manager.... [I, personally, gave it three stars.]
--Beth Warrell, assistant editor
In Autumn Street the first sentence, "It was a long time ago," sweeps the reader back to an era of disturbing times for both children and a nation.... World War II. Young people of that era didn't understand .....
--Mary D. Lankford, advisory board member
The cast of characters in Jip: His Story may remind readers of a Dickens novel... Jip is a compelling mystery with excellent characterization and an authentic depiction of 1850s rural America.
--Laura Tillotson, editor
The current interest in all things patriotic invites one to look at
My Fellow Americans: A Family Album as an award-winning title. It is a visual book of information that respects the natural curiosity many young readers have for people who lived in earlier times. I appreciate Provensen's personal choices of men and women who made significant contributions (both good and otherwise) to U.S. history and culture. ... Who would be in your "Family Album" in 2002?
--Judy Moburg, advisory board member
Scooter is an evocative love letter to an urban childhood ....It's filled with joy.
--Julie Corsaro, advisory board chair
If life gives you lemons, well, make lemonade, and this is just what Virginia Euwer Wolff did by taking a trite statement and weaving it into Make Lemonade , her astounding blank-verse novel.
--Randall Enos, advisory board member