Josette Frank Award
The Josette Frank Award is an American children's literary award for fiction given annually by the Children's Book Committee at Bank Street College of Education. It "honors a book or books of outstanding literary merit in which children or young people deal in a positive and realistic way with difficulties in their world and grow emotionally and morally".[1]
Gary D. Schmidt, winner of the 2024 Josette Frank Award for his novel The Labors of Hercules Beal, wrote in his acceptance letter, "If it can be said that awards such as the Josette Frank award fight for children, then Bank Street has, for many years, fought valiantly for children. You’ve held high standards of artistic excellence AND encouraged writers and illustrators who want to talk about the world that real children inhabit, even if it’s a pretty broken world that fills those pages. Just listing those titles suggests how the award has honored books that are honest accounts, that point to a world that doesn’t always value children and their experience, a world that often wars against them. But these books assert that in that world are children whose lives are mighty and lovely, and that their immediate experience is not always to be determined by the brokenness children find around them every single day. What could possibly be more important in today’s literature than a book that a child could pick up, read, and come away saying, 'I can grow too'?"[2]
Known as the Children's Book Award from 1943 to 1997, it was renamed in honor of Josette Frank, the editor of many anthologies for children and a former Executive Director of the Child Study Association of America.[1][3] The prize to the author of the book has been provided by the Florence L. Miller Memorial Fund.
The Josette Frank Award is one of several prominent awards that the Children's Book Committee gives each year. The Flora Stieglitz Straus Award, established in 1994, is presented to "a distinguished work of nonfiction that serves as an inspiration to young people." The Claudia Lewis Award, given for the first time in 1998, honors the best poetry book of the year. The Margaret Wise Brown Board Book Award, a biennial award, presented to published or adapted board books, was established in 2023 and honored books published in 2021-2022.[4]
Winners
[edit]Children's Book Award
[edit]Award Year | Award Distinction | Book Title (Year Published) | Author | Illustrator | Publisher |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1943 | Keystone Kids (1943) | John R. Tunis | Harcourt Brace | ||
1944 | The House (1944) | Marjorie Hill Allee | Helen Blair | Houghton Mifflin | |
1945 | The Moved-Outers (1945) | Florence Cranell Means | Houghton Mifflin | ||
1946 | Heart of Danger (1946) | Howard Pease | Doubleday | ||
1947 | Judy's Journey (1947) | Lois Lenski | J. B. Lippincott & Co. | ||
1948 | The Big Wave (1948) | Pearl S. Buck | Utagawa Hiroshige and Katsushika Hokusai | John Day Company | |
1949 | Paul Tiber: Forester (1949) | Maria Gleit | Ralph Ray | Charles Scribner's Sons | |
1950 | Partners: The United Nations and Youth (1950) | Eleanor Roosevelt and Helen Ferris | Junior Literary Guild/Doubleday | ||
1951 | No Award | ||||
1952 | Jareb (1952) | Miriam Powell | Marc Simont | Thomas Y. Crowell | |
Twenty and Ten (1952); later republished with minor edits as The Secret Cave (1969, 1973 Scholastic)[5] | Claire Huchet Bishop | William Pène du Bois | Puffin | ||
1953 | In a Mirror (1953) | Mary Stolz | Harper | ||
1954 | High Road Home (1954) | William Corbin | Coward-McCann/Junior Literary Guild | ||
The Ordeal of the Young Hunter (1954) | Jonreed Lauritzen | Hoke Denetsosie | Little, Brown and Company | ||
1955 | Crow Boy | Taro Yashima | |||
Plain Girl | Virginia Sorenson | ||||
1956 | The House of Sixty Fathers | Meindert DeJong | Maurice Sendak | Harper & Row | |
1957 | Shadow Across the Campus | Helen Roney Sattler | Dodd Mead | ||
1958 | South Town | Lorenz Graham | |||
1959 | Jennifer | Zoa Sherburne | |||
1960 | Janine | Robin McKown | Messner | ||
1961 | Winner | The Road to Agra (translated from Norwegian by Evelyn Ramsden) | Aimee Sommerfelt | Ulf Aas | Criterion |
Special Citation | The Girl From Puerto Rico | Hila Colman | |||
1962 | The Trouble With Terry | John Lexau | |||
1963 | Winner | The Peaceable Revolution | Betty Schechter | ||
Special Citation | The Rock and the Willow | Mildred Lee | |||
1964 | The High Pasture | Ruth Peabody Harnden | Vee Guthrie | ||
1965 | The Empty Schoolhouse | Natalie Savage Carlson | John Kauffman | ||
1966 | Winner | Queenie Peavy | Robert Burch | ||
Special Citation | Curious George Goes to the Hospital | Margret Rey and H. A. Rey | Margret Rey and H.A. Rey | Houghton Mifflin | |
1967 | The Contender | Robert Lipsyte | |||
1968 | Winner | What It's All About (translated from Russian by Joseph Barnes) | Vadim Frolic | Macmillan | |
Special Citation | Where's Daddy? A Story about Divorce | Beth Goff | Susan Perl | Beacon Press | |
1969 | The Empty Moat | Margaretha Shemin | Coward-McCann | ||
1970 | Migrant Girl | Carli Laklan | |||
Rock Star | James Lincoln Collier | ||||
1971 | Winner | John Henry McCoy | Lillie D. Chaffin | Emanuel Schongut | |
Special Citation | The Pair of Shoes | Aline Glasgow | Symeon Shimin | Dial BFYR | |
1972 | A Sound of Chariots | Mollie Hunter | |||
1973 | A Taste of Blackberries | Doris Buchanan Smith | |||
1974 | Luke Was There | Eleanor Clymer | Diane DeGroat | ||
1975 | The Garden is Doing Fine | Carol Farley | Lynn Sweat | ||
1976 | Somebody Else's Child | Roberta Silman | Chris Conover | ||
1977 | The Pinballs | Betsy Byars | |||
1978 | The Devil in Vienna | Doris Orgel | |||
1979 | The Whipman is Watching | T. A. Dyer | |||
1980 | A Boat to Nowhere | Maureen Wartski | |||
1981 | A Spirit to Ride the Whirlwind | Athena Lord | |||
1982 | Homesick: My Own Story | Jean Fritz | Margot Tomes | Putnam | |
1983 | Winner | The Sign of the Beaver | Elizabeth George Speare | ||
Special Citation | The Solomon System | Phyllis Reynolds Naylor | |||
1984 | One-Eyed Cat | Paula Fox | |||
1985 | Winner | With Westie and the Tin Man | C.S. Adler | Macmillan | |
Special Citation | Ain't Gonna Study War No More: The Story of America's Peace Seekers | Milton Meltzer | Harper and Row | ||
1986 | Journey to Jo'burg | Beverley Naidoo | |||
1987 | Rabble Starkey | Lois Lowry | |||
1988 | Winner | The Most Beautiful Place in the World | Ann Cameron | Thomas Allen | Knopf |
Special Citation | December Stillness | Mary Downing Hahn | |||
1989 | Shades of Gray | Carolyn Reeder | |||
1990 | Secret City, USA | Felice Holman | |||
1991 | Shadow Boy | Susan E. Kirby | |||
1992 | Blue Skin of the Sea | Graham Salisbury | |||
1993 | Make Lemonade | Virginia Euwer Wolff | |||
1994 | Earthshine | Theresa Nelson | |||
1995 | Winner | Music from a Place Called Half Moon | Jerrie Oughton | ||
Special Citation | The Watsons Go to Birmingham: 1963 | Christopher Paul Curtis | Delacorte Press | ||
1996 | The Cuckoo's Child | Suzanne Freeman |
Josette Frank Award
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ a b "Awards". The Children's Book Committee. Bank Street College of Education (bankstreet.edu). Retrieved 2015-10-29. With linked lists of past winners by decade.
- ^ Schmidt, Gary (2024-01-01). "Gary D. Schmidt Josette Frank Award 2024 Acceptance Letter". Children's Book Committee.
- ^ "Josette Frank Award". University of Nebraska at Kearney. Retrieved 2018-11-06.
- ^ Hare, Peter. "Awards". Bank Street College of Education. Retrieved 2022-07-07.
- ^ "Twenty and Ten (1952) – A Beastiary of Books". beastiaryofbooks.sites.ucsc.edu. Retrieved 2022-07-07.