2009 Book Awards
Calendar of Events
Announcement of Winners
April 28, 2009
Presentation of Awards
October 16, 2009
New York City
What
are the Jane Addams Children's Book Awards?
The Jane Addams Children's Book Awards are given
annually to the children's books published the preceding year that
effectively promote the cause of peace, social justice, world community,
and the equality of the sexes and all races as well as meeting conventional
standards for excellence.
The Jane Addams Children's Book Awards have been
presented annually since 1953 by the Women's International League
for Peace and Freedom (WILPF) and the Jane Addams Peace Association.
Beginning in 1993, a Picture Book category was created. Honor books
may be chosen in each category.
Authors and artists of award-winning and honor books
each receive a certificate and a cash award. Seals designating each
recognition are available for purchase by publishers, libraries, schools
and others wanting them from the Jane Addams Peace Association.
Between 1963 and 2002, announcement of the awards
was made each fall on the September anniversary of Jane Addams' birth
date. Beginning in 2003, the award winners are announced on April
28, the anniversary of the founding of WILPF. An awards presentation,
open to all, is held each year on the third Friday of October.

Honoring children's books since 1953
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FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
JANE ADDAMS CHILDREN'S BOOK AWARDS ANNOUNCED
April 28, 2009
.Winners of the 2009 Jane Addams Children's Book
Awards were announced today by the Jane Addams Peace Association.
Planting the Trees of Kenya: The Story of Wangari Maathai, written
and illustrated by Claire A. Nivola, Frances Foster Books/Farrar, Straus
and Giroux, an imprint of Macmillan Children's Publishing Group, is
the winner in the Books for Younger Children Category. The Surrender
Tree: Poems of Cuba's Struggle for Freedom by Margarita Engle, published
by Henry Holt Books for Young Readers, an imprint of Macmillan Children's
Publishing Group, is the winner in the Books for Older Children Category
Planting
the Trees of Kenya: The Story of Wangari Maathai profiles the first
woman from Africa to win the Nobel Peace Prize (2004). Environmentalist
and activist Wangari Maathai founded Kenya's Green Belt Movement (1977)
in direct response to the devastated natural resources and poverty caused
by the deforestation of her homeland for commercial purposes. In a picture
book that glows with orange and green landscapes dotted with bright
blue, red, purple and yellow details, Nivola presents Maathai as a steady
leader who saw community building as a way to resolve problems. She
drew first on her own courage, then on the courage of many women, to
sow seeds, nurture seedlings and plant trees. Together, they built a
movement that continues to inspire people to take charge of their lives,
their land and their future.
The
Surrender Tree: Poems of Cuba's Struggle for Freedom poignantly
explores resistance to slavery and occupation in Cuba in the late 1800's.
Allied with the rebels fighting for independence, Rosa, born a slave
and a healer, responds to bloodshed by healing compatriots and enemies
alike. Moving from cave to cave in the mountains, Rosa, her husband
Jose and Silvia, a child they heal and nurture, commit to peace with
each herb they gather, each wound they dress, each spirit they soothe.
Free verse poems in four distinct voices intertwine Cuban history, Engle's
own family story and historical fiction to create a searing, evocative
portrait of healers who worked for peace so young people could ".
. . have their chance/to dream/of new ways/to feel free . . ."
Two books were named Honor books in the Books for Younger Children
Category.
The
Storyteller's Candle/La velita de los cuentos, Story/Lucía
González, Illustrations/Illustraciones Lulu Delacre, published
by Children's Book Press, has been named an Honor Book in the Books
for Younger Children category. One of many immigrant children in New
York City in the 1930's,sprited Hildamar lives with her family in close-knit
community as they face weather, language, food and customs so unlike
those of their beloved Puerto Rico. Their community widens and deepens
when Hildamar and her cousin meet Pura Belpre, the librarian at the
local public library who not only speaks Spanish but invites families
to the library to celebrate Three King's Day! With text in Spanish and
English and sepia-toned illustrations with qualities of folk art, this
picture book pays tribute to Pura Belpre, the first Puerto Rican librarian
for New York Public Library-a woman who instinctively understood the
importance of culture and language in building community, acted upon
those instincts and brought countless children into the circle of light
and literacy shed by her storyteller's candle.
Silent
Music: A Story of Baghdad written and illustrated by James Rumford,
an Honor Book for Younger Children, is a Neal Porter Book/Roaring Brook
Press, an imprint of Macmillan Children's Publishing Group. Ali, a boy
living in Baghdad today, loves soccer, parent-rattling music, dancing,
and, most of all, calligraphy. His lively life, extended family and
thoughtful nature flow from pages that weave calligraphy, intricate
patterns and backdrops of golden brown into their design. Drawing strength
from explicit visual and textual references to Iraq's long history of
literacy, the story of Ali's passionate practice of calligraphy, first,
highlights the power of literacy as a creative force in the midst of
war, then, as a metaphor, invites reflection on the difficulty of practicing
peace.
Two books were named honor books in the books for Older Children Category.
The
Shepherd's Granddaughter by Anne Laurel Carter, published by Groundwood
Books/House of Anansi Press is a realistic novel set in contemporary
Palestine. Firmly grounded in the values and love of her extended family,
Amani rejoices when her grandfather wisely grants her wish to become
the first female shepherd in a line of shepherds reaching back thousands
of years. But, when the family pastureland is usurped by an Israeli
settlement, Amani faces challenges different from any shepherd who has
gone before her. With immediacy and emotion, Carter's novel purposefully
centers on Amani's family, its traditions and love of the land to give
texture and meaning to an array of individual responses to violence
and oppression. Amani's struggle to come to grips with a world she cannot
understand or accept creates a framework for addressing questions about
peace, war and injustice that are of utmost importance in the world
today.
Ain't
Nothing But a Man: My Quest to Find the Real John Henry, by Scott
Reynolds Nelson with Marc Aronson, published by National Geographic,
tracks the real man behind the larger-than-life hero of folk song fame
by following clues in the song, allusions in reference works, and discrepancies
in historical records. With a text that embodies the excitement of its
writers, Ain't Nothing But a Man engages through curiosity and wonder
to arrive at profound questions about the life of John Henry and the
40,000 African-American men who laid tracks for the railroad in the
United States in the 1800's. Powerful photographs, cropped and enlarged
throughout, underscore the importance of listening to the voices of
those who have been unjustly silenced. This chronicle's meticulous documentation
bolstered by deeply-felt compassion make it clear that writing history
can be a creative, humane way to address social injustice past and present
Since 1953, a national committee chooses winners and honor books for older and younger children. Members of the 2009 Jane Addams Children's Book Awards Committee are Susan C. Griffith, Chair (Mt. Pleasant, Michigan), Barbara Bair (Washington, D. C.), Marianne Baker (Charlottesville, Virginia), Ann Carpenter (Harwich, Massachusetts), Sonja Cherry-Paul (Yonkers, New York), Eliza T. Dresang (Seattle, Washington), Julie Olsen Edwards (Soquel, California) Oralia Garza de Cortes (Pasadena, California), Daisy Gutierrez (Houston, Texas), Margaret Jensen (Madison, Wisconsin), Sarah Park (Minneapolis, Minnesota), Pat Wiser (Sewanee, Tennessee) and Junko Yokota (Skokie, Illinois). Regional reading and discussion groups participated with many of the committee members throughout the jury's evaluation and selection process.
The 2009 Jane Addams Children's Book Awards will be presented Friday, October 16 th in New York City. Details about the Award event and about securing winner and honor book seals are available from the Jane Addams Peace Association (JAPA). Contact JAPA Executive Director Linda B. Belle, 777 United Nations Plaza, 6 th Floor, New York, NY 10017-3521; by phone 212-682-8830; and by e-mail japa@igc.org .
For additional information about the Jane Addams Children's Book Awards and a complete list of books honored since 1953, see www.janeaddamspeace.org .
Founded in 1948, JAPA is the educational arm of the Women's International League for Peace and Freedom (WILPF) whose headquarters are in Geneva, Switzerland. In addition to sponsoring the Jane Addams Children's Book Awards and many other educational projects, JAPA houses the New York United Nation's Office of International WILPF. Organized on April 28 th in 1915, WILPF is celebrating its 94 th year. For information, visit www.wilpf.int.ch/
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list of complete list of winners
of the
Jane Addams Children's Book Award.
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