>Here they are, the winners of the 2008 Boston Globe Horn Book Awards.
>

Here they are, the winners of the 2008 Boston Globe Horn Book Awards.
Nonfiction:
The Wall, by Peter Sis, published by Foster/Farrar.
Honor Books:
Frogs by Nic Bishop (Scholastic) and
What to Do about Alice? by Barbara Kerley, illustrated by Edwin Fotheringham (Scholastic)
Fiction:
The Absolutely True Diary of a Part-Time Indian by Sherman Alexie, illustrated by Ellen Forney (Little, Brown)
Honor Books:
Shooting the Moon by Frances O'Roark Dowell
(Atheneum) and
Savvy by Ingrid Law (Walden/Dial)
Picture Books:
At Night by Jonathan Bean (Farrar)
Honor Books:
Fred Stays with Me! by Nancy Coffelt, illustrated by Tricia Tusa (Little, Brown) and
A Couple of Boys Have the Best Week Ever by Marla Frazee (Harcourt)
Special Citation, for excellence in graphic storytelling:
The Arrival by Shaun Tan (Levine/Scholastic)
Read the
press release for complete details.
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Lisa
>We read several of these in my YA lit class last spring and the college students loved them!I headed to my first ALA Convention and can't wait to see all of books!
Posted : Jun 27, 2008 12:52
Roger Sutton
>Heck, I know people who say a picture book is thirty-two pages. Other people say Hugo Cabret is a picture book, and we know how calmly that definition was received.Posted : Jun 20, 2008 11:49
Melinda
>So I suppose that means that Superman comics are all picture books. And so is Maus by Art Spiegelman. Because, like, they all have pictures.I'm afraid there's a difference. The Arrival has a much different audience, purpose, and form compared to, say, Where the Wild Things Are.
Just my .02.
Posted : Jun 19, 2008 09:14
Anonymous
>The Arrival is a picture book, of course. Why was that even an issue? Just because it's a picture book aimed at an older audience? Pfffft.Posted : Jun 19, 2008 08:56
Roger Sutton
>The special citation has been given five times previously in the BGHB's forty-year history: Changing City and Changing Countryside by Jorg Mueller, Graham Oakley's Magical Changes, Tana Hoban's 1,2,3, Nancy Ekholm Burkert's Valentine & Orson, and Peter Sis's Tibet. What these books seem to have in common is innovation in form (Magical Changes is a toy book, for example) or genre (both the Burkert and the Sis blur all kinds of boundaries). Is The Arrival a picture book or fiction? Does fiction need to have words? It is questions like those that make me glad for the "special citation" loophole. I guess it's an award for a book all the judges agree is great, even when they don't know exactly what it's being great at.Posted : Jun 19, 2008 07:15