NEWBERRY AWARD WINNERS
The Newbery Medal is awarded annually to the author of the
most distinguished contribution to American Literature for children.
2007: 5.9/5 The Higher Power of Lucky
Patron, Susan. Fearing that her legal guardian plans to abandon
her to return to France, ten-year-old aspiring scientist Lucky
Trimble determines to run away while also continuing to seek the
Higher Power that will bring stability to her life.
2006: 5.5/7 Cariss Cross Perkins, Lynne
Rae. Teenagers in a small town in the 1960s experience new thoughts
and feelings, question their identities, connect, and disconnect
as they search for the meaning of life and love.
2005: 4.7/7 Kira-Kira Kadohata, Cynthia.
Chronicles the close friendship between two Japanese-American
sisters growing up in rural Georgia during the late 1950s and
early 1960s, and the despair when one sister becomes terminally
ill.
2004: 4.7/5 Tale of Despereaux DiCamillo,
Kate. The adventures of Desperaux Tilling, a small mouse of unusual
talents, the princess that he loves, the servant girl who longs
to be a princess, and a devious rat determined to bring them all
to ruin.
2003: 5.0/7 Crispin: The Cross of Lead
Avi. Falsely accused of theft and murder, an orphaned peasant
boy in fourteenth-century England flees his village and meets
a larger-than-life juggler who holds a dangerous secret.
2002: 6.6/6 A Single Shard Park, Linda
Sue. Tree-ear, a thirteen-year-old orphan in medieval Korea, lives
under a bridge in a potter's village, and longs to learn how to
throw the delicate celadon ceramics himself.
2001: 4.5/4 A Year Down Yonder Peck,
Richard. During the recession of 1937, fifteen-year-old Mary Alice
is sent to live with her feisty, larger-than-life grandmother
in rural Illinois and comes to a better understanding of this
fearsome woman. Sequel to A Long Way from Chicago.
2000: 5.0/8 Bud, Not Buddy Curtis, Christopher
Paul. Ten-year-old Bud, a motherless boy living in Flint, Michigan,
during the Great Depression, escapes a bad foster home and sets
out in search of the man he believes to be his father--the renowned
bandleader, H. E. Calloway of Grand Rapids.
1999: 4.6/7 Holes Sachar, Louis. As further
evidence of his family's bad fortune which they attribute to a
curse on a distant relative, Stanley Yelnats is sent to a hellish
correctional camp in the Texas desert where he finds his first
real friend, a treasure, and a new sense of himself.
1998: 5.6/7 Out of the Dust Hesse, Karen.
In a series of poems, fifteen-year-old Billie Jo relates the hardships
of living on her family's wheat farm in Oklahoma during the dust
bowl years of the Depression.
1997: 5.9/7 View from Saturday Konigsburg,
E. L. Four students, with their own individual stories, develop
a special bond and attract the attention of their teacher, a paraplegic,
who chooses them to represent their sixth-grade class in the Academic
Bowl competition.
1996: 6.0/3 Mikdwife's Apprentice Cushman,
Karen. In medieval England, a nameless, homeless girl is taken
in by a sharp-tempered midwife, and in spite of obstacles and
hardship, eventually gains the three things she most wants: a
full belly, a contented heart, and a place in this world.
1995: 4.9/9 Walk Two Moons Creech, Sharon.
Thirteen-year-old Salamanca Tree Hiddle's mother has disappeared.
While tracing her steps on a car trip from Ohio to Idaho with
her grandparents, Salamanca tells a story to pass the time about
a friend named Phoebe Winterbottom whose mother vanished and who
received secret messages after her disappearance. One of them
read, "Don't judge a man until you have walked two moons
in his moccasins." Despite her father's warning that she
is "fishing in the air," Salamanca hopes to bring her
home. By drawing strength from her Native American ancestry, she
is able to face the truth about her mother.
1994: 5.7/7 The Giver - Lowry, Lois. Given
his lifetime assignment at the Ceremony of Twelve, Jonas becomes
the receiver of memories shared by only one other in his community
and discovers the terrible truth about the society in which he
lives.
1993: 5.3/3 Missing May Rylant, Cynthia.
After the death of the beloved aunt who has raised her, twelve-year-old
Summer and her uncle Ob leave their West Virginia trailer in search
of the strength to go on living.
1992: 4.4/4 Shiloh Naylor, Phyllis Reynolds.
Marty finds a dog that he is sure is being abused. Even though
he knows who owns the dog, he makes the decision to keep and care
for it.
1991: 4.7/5 Maniac Magee Spinelli, Jerry.
Maniac Magee was a legend. Kids were always talking about how
fast he could run; how high he could jump; how no knot would stay
knotted once he began to untie it. But the thing Maniac Magee
was best known for is what he did for the kids from the black
East End and those from the white West end of town.
1990: 4.5/4 Number the Stars Lowry,
Lois, Ten-year-old Annemarie Johansen and her best friend Ellen
Rosen often think about life before the war. But it's now 1943
and their life in Copenhagen is filled with school,food shortages,
and the Nazi soldiers marching in their town.
The Nazis won't stop. The Jews of Denmark are being "relocated,"
so Ellen moves in with the Johansens and pretends to be part of
the family.
Then Annemarie is asked to go on a dangerous mission. Somehow
she must find the strength and courage to save her best friend's
life.
1988: 7.7/5 Lincoln: A Photobiography (92)
Freedman, Russell. This work is perhaps the most complete and
enjoyable children's book ever written about one of the nation's
most fascinating and important figures. The author covers Lincoln's
life and career in a balanced treatment that is enhanced by period
photographs and drawings.
1987: 3.9/2 The Whipping Boy Sid Fleischman.
A bratty prince and his whipping boy have many adventures when
they inadvertently trade places after becoming involved with dangerous
outlaws.
1986: 3.4/1 Sarah, Plain and Tall MacLachlan,
Patricia. When their father invites a mail-order bride to come
to live with them in their prairie home, Caleb and Anna are captivated
by her and hope that she will stay.
1985: 7.0/15 The Hero and the Crown McKinley,
Robin. Although she is the daughter of Damar's king, Aerin has
never been accepted as full royalty. Both in and out of the royal
court, people whisper the story of her mother, the witchwoman,
who was said to have enspelled the king into marrying her to get
an heir to rule Damar-then died of despair when she found she
had borne a daughter instead of a son. But none of them, not even
Aerin herself, can predict her future-for she is to be the true
hero who will wield the power of the Blue Sword...
1984: 4.9/3 Dear Mr. Henshaw Cleary,
Beverly. A boy writes letters to an author through the years and
keeps a diary.
1983: 5.0/11 Dicey's Song Voight, Cynthia.
Now that the four abandoned Tillerman children are settled in
with their grandmother, Dicey finds that their new beginnings
require love, trust, humor and courage.
1982: 4.5/0.5 A Visit to William Blake's Inn: Poems
for Innocent and Experienced Travelers (811) Willard,
Nancy. This delightful collection of poetry for children brings
to life Blake's imaginary inn and its unusual guests.
1981: 5.7/8 Jacob Have I Loved Paterson,
Katherine. Sara Louise Bradshaw is sick and tired of her beautiful
twin Caroline. Ever since they were born, Caroline has been the
pretty one, the talented one, the better sister. Even now, Caroline
seems to take everything: Louise's friends, their parents' love,
her dreams for the future.For once in her life, Louise wants to
be the special one. But in order to do that, she must first figure
out who she is . . . and find a way to make a place for herself
outside her sister's shadow.
1980: 6.7/5 A Gathering of Days: A New England
Girl's Journal, 1830-1832 Blos, Joan. The journal of
a fourteen-year-old girl, kept the last year she lived on the
family farm, records daily events in her small New Hampshire town,
her father's remarriage, and the death of her best friend.
1979: 5.3/8 Westing Game Raskin, Ellen.
The mysterious death of an eccentric millionaire brings together
an assortment of heirs who must discover the murderer before they
can claim their inheritance.
1978: 4.6/5 Bridge to Terabithia Paterson,
Katherine. The life of a ten-year-old boy in rural Virginia expands
when he becomes friends with a newcomer who subsequently meets
an untimely death trying to reach their hideaway, Terabithia,
during a storm.
1977: 5.7/10 Roll of Thunder, Hear My Cry
Taylor, Mildred. A black family living in the South during the
1930s is faced with prejudice and discrimination which its children
do not understand.
1976: 6.2/9 The Grey King Cooper, Susan.
A strange boy and dog remind Will Stanton that he is an immortal,
whose quest is to find the golden harp which will rouse others
from a long slumber in the Welsh hills so they may prepare for
the ultimate battle of Light versus Dark.
1975: 4.4/10 M. C. Higgins, the Great - Hamilton,
Virginia. As a slag heap, the result of strip mining, creeps closer
to his house in the Ohio hills, fifteen-year-old M. C. is torn
between trying to get his family away and fighting for the home
they love.
1974: 6.0/6 Slave Dancer Fox, Paula.
Kidnapped by the crew of an Africa-bound ship, a thirteen-year-old
boy discovers to his horror that he is on a slaver and his job
is to play music for the exercise periods of the human cargo.
1973: 5.8/6 Julie of the Wolves George,
Jean Craighead. Julie is accepted by a pack of wolves. Her months
in the wild bring her appreciation of her Eskimo heritage that
conflicts with her desire to forsake it.
1972: 5.1/8 Mrs. Frisby and the Rats of NIMH O'Brien, Robert C. A mouse, whose husband died in the laboratory
where his cellmates gained wisdom, asks for their help.
1971: 4.9/4 Summer of the Swans Byars,
Betsy. A teen-age girl gains new insight into herself and her
family when her mentally handicapped brother gets lost.
1970: 5.3/3 Sounder Armstrong, William
H. Sounder traces the keen sorrow and the abiding faith of a poor
African-American boy in the 19th century South. The boy's father
is a sharecropper, struggling to feed his family in hard times.
Night after night, he and his great coon dog, Sounder, return
to the cabin empty-handed. Then, one morning, almost like a miracle,
a sweet-smelling ham is cooking in the family's kitchen. At last
the family will have a good meal. But that night, an angry sheriff
and deputies come, and the boy's life will never be the same.
1969: 6.1/11 High King Alexander, Lloyd.
In this fifth and final chronicle of Prydain the forces of good
and evil meet in ultimate confrontation.
1968: 4.7/5 From the Mixed-Up Files of Mrs. Basil
E. Frankweiler Konisgburg, E. L. Claudia decided to
run away to make her parents appreciate her. She took her brother,
and they went to live at the Metropolitan Museum of Art. Once
the fun of settling in was over, she had two problems: she felt
just the same, and she wanted to feel different; and she found
a statue that was so beautiful that she couldn't go home until
she knew who had made it. Even the experts didn't know that.
The statue's former owner was Mrs. Basil E. Frankweiler, and
without her help, Claudia might never be able to go home.
1967: 6.6/8 Up a Road Slowly Hunt, Irene.
A poignant junior novel of the sometimes painful, often beautiful
years of adolescence as Julie Trelling grew up.
1966: 6.5/7 I, Juan de Pareja De Trevino,
Elizabeth. Juan is the slave of the great Spanish painter Diego
Velazquez and helps his master in his studio by preparing paints
and stretching canvases. But Juan is an artist, too; he has taught
himself by watching his master's technique. Although such work
is forbidden to slaves, Juan cannot keep his secret any longer.
What will happen when the truth is known?
1965: 5.2/5 Shadow of a Bull Wojciechowska,
Maia. Manolo Olivar has to make a decision: to follow in his famous
father's shadow and become a bullfighter, or to follow his heart
and become a doctor.
1964: 4.7/5 It's Like This, Cat Neville,
Emily. Dave and his father disagree, yet with the help of a cat,
they finally begin to understand each other.
1963: 4.7/7 A Wrinkle in Time L'Engle,
Madeleine. Meg and her friends are spirited to another world by
three extra-terrestrial beings.
1962: 5.0/10 Bronze Bow Speare, Elizabeth
George. "The scene is Jerusalem at the time of Christ, the
characters vividly real, the story gripping." "A moving,
vivid, and well-written picture of the spiritual vs. the material,
vengeance vs. love."
1961: 5.4/6 Island of the Blue Dolphins
O'Dell, Scott. The story of an Indian girl who spent eighteen
years on a deserted island off the California coast; a tale of
courage, self-reliance, and acceptance of fate.
1959: 5.7/9 Witch of Blackbird Pond Speare,
Elizabeth George. In 1687 a young girl from Barbados visits her
Puritan relatives in Connecticut and becomes the suspect in a
witchhunt.
1958: 6.1/14 Rifles for Watie Keith,
Harold. This is a rich and sweeping novel-rich in its panorama
of history; in its details so clear that the reader never doubts
for a moment that he is there; in its dozens of different people,
each one fully realized and wholly recognizable. It is a story
of a lesser--known part of the Civil War, the Western campaign,
a part different in its issues and its problems, and fought with
a different savagery. Inexorably it moves to a dramatic climax,
evoking a brilliant picture of a war and the men of both sides
who fought in it.
1957: 4.9/7 Miracles on Maple Hill Sorenson,
Virginia. Marly's father came back from the war a different man.
Something inside him seems as cold and dead as the winter world
outside. But when the family moves to Grandma's old house on Maple
Hill, miracles begin to happen. The sap in the trees begins to
rise, the leaves begin to turn, and Marly's father starts to bloom
again, like the world around him.
1956: 4.1/8 Carry On, Mr. Bowditch (92) -
Latham, Jean Lee. Readers today are still fascinated by "Nat,"
an eighteenth-century nautical wonder and mathematical wizard.
Nathaniel Bowditch grew up in a sailor's world-Salem in the early
days, when tall-masted ships from foreign ports crowded the wharves.
But Nat didn't promise to have the makings of a sailor; he was
too physically small. Nat may have been slight of build, but no
one guessed that he had the persistence and determination to master
sea navigation in the days when men sailed only by "log,
lead, and lookout." Nat's long hours of study and observation,
collected in his famous work, The American Practical Navigator
(also known as the "Sailors" Bible"), stunned the
sailing community and made him a New England hero.
1955: 4.7/10 Wheel on the School DeJong,
Meindert. This book tells the story of a young girl and her simple
composition about the storks that build their nests in neighboring
villages. When the children wonder why the storks don't nest in
their village, the stage is set for a dramatic challenge against
all odds.
1954: 4.8/8 And Now Miguel Krumgold,
Joseph. Miguel Chavez who held in his heart a secret wish and
yearned to go with the men of his family to the Sagre de Cristo
Mountains.
1953: 4.7/5 Secret of the Andes Clark,
Ann Nolan. An Indian boy who tends llamas in a hidden valley in
Peru learns the traditions and secrets of his Inca ancestors.
1952: 6.0/9 Ginger Pye Estes, Eleanor.
Ginger Pye is the smartest dog in the town of Cranbury. Bought
with a hard-earned dollar by Jerry Pye and his sister, Rachel,
his coming also marks the arrival of a mysterious stranger who
wears a mustard-yellow hat. Why does the hat so often appear
whenever Ginger is about? Suddenly Ginger vanishes, and Jerry
and Rachel's quest to rescue their brilliant dog is an engaging
story about the truly remarkable Ginger Pye and the people who
love him.
1951: 6.5/5 Amos Fortune, Free Man (92)
Yates, Elizabeth. Here is the riveting true story of Amos Fortune,
born a prince of the At-munshi tribe in Africa and abducted by
slave traders at the age of fifteen. In Massachusetts, at the
age of sixty, he finally bought his own freedom - and then continued
on as a free man to become an expert tanner, a loving husband
and father, and an active citizen until his death in 1801. But
most importantly, he fulfilled his life's dream of buying the
freedom of many other enslaved people.
1950: 6.2/4 Door in the Wall deAngeli,
Marguerite. This Newbery Medal winning story, set in medieval
times, is about a boy who learns his own strength when he saves
the castle and discovers there is more than one way to serve his
king.
1949: 5.4/5 King of the Wind Henry, Marguerite.
An Arabian stallion is brought to England to become one of the
founding sires of the Thoroughbred breed.
1948: 6.8/6 Twenty-One Balloons du Bois,
William. Relates the incredible adventures of Professor William
Waterman Sherman, who in 1883 sets off in a balloon across the
Pacific, survives the volcanic eruption of Krakatoa, and is eventually
picked up in the Atlantic.
1947: 5.9/4 Miss Hickory Bailey, Carolyn
Sherwin. Relates the adventures of a country doll made of an apple-wood
twig with a hickory nut for a head
1946: 4.8/6 Strawberry Girl Lenski, Lois.
Strawberries -- big, ripe, and juicy. Ten-year-old Birdie Boyer
can hardly wait to start picking them. But her family has just
moved to the Florida backwoods, and they haven't even begun their
planting. "Don't count your biddies 'fore they're hatched,
gal young un!" her father tells her. Making the new farm
prosper is not easy. There is heat to suffer through, and droughts,
and cold snaps. And, perhaps most worrisome of all for the Boyers,
there are rowdy neighbors, just itching to start a feud.
1945: 6.4/3 Rabbit Hill Lawson, Robert.
What happens when the animals of Rabbit Hill learn that new folks
are moving into the big, empty house?
1944: 5.9/13 Johnny Tremain Forbes, Esther.
The story of a silversmith's apprentice, whose hand was crippled
by an accident at work, and of how he worked for the Boston patriots
during the Revolution.
1943: 6.5/9 Adam of the Road Gray, Elizabeth.
The adventures of eleven-year-old Adam as he travels the open
roads of thirteenth-century England searching for his missing
father, a minstrel, and his stolen red spaniel, Nick.
1941: 6.2/3 Call It Courage Sperry, Armstrong.
Based on a Polynesian legend, this is the story of a youth who
overcomes his fear of the sea and proves his courage to himself
and his people.
1939: 5.7/5 Thimble Summer Enright, Elizabeth.
When Garnet finds a silver thimble in the sand by the river, she
is sure it's magical. But is it magical enough to help
her pig, Timmy, win a blue ribbon on Fair Day?
1938: 6.6/2 White Stag Seredy, Kate.
Retells the legendary story of the Huns' and Magyars' long migration
from Asia to Europe where they hope to find a permanent home
1936: 6.0/3 Caddie Woodlawn Brink, Carol
Ryrie. The adventures of an eleven-year-old tomboy growing up
on the Wisconsin frontier in the mid-nineteenth century.
1934: 8.0/10 Invincible Louisa Meigs,
Cornelia. In this true story of Louisa May Alcott, you'll find
out what happened to Jo (Louisa) and her sisters--and whether
there really was a Laurie.
1933: 6.4/10 Young Fu of the Upper Yangtze Lewis, Elizabeth. This story is about Young Fu, a country
boy, who is apprenticed to a master coppersmith when he and his
mother move to the city of Chungking during the exciting and often
dangerous 1920s.
1932: 5.6/8 Waterless Mountain Armer,
Laura. Younger Brother, a Navaho Indian boy, undergoes eight years
of training in the ancient religion of his people and the practical
knowledge of material existence.
1931: 5.9/2 Cat Who Went to Heaven Coatsworth,
Elizabeth. A little cat comes to the home of a poor Japanese artist
and, by humility and devotion, brings him good fortune.
1930: 7.1/11 Hitty, Her First Hundred Years Field, Rachel. A doll named Hitty recounts her adventures
as she moves through a continually changing string of owners.
1929: 7.1/10 Trumpeter of Krakow Kelly,
Eric P. How the commemoration of an act of bravery and self-sacrifice
in ancient Krakow saved the lives of a family two centuries later.
In this stoyr of Poland, there is adventure and mystery aplenty.
1928: 6.5/6 Gay Neck, the Story of a Pigeon Mukerji, Dhan Gopal. This book is the story of a carrier
pigeon raised in India who is used by a Bengal Regiment in France
during World War I.
1926: 5.4/6 Shen of the Sea Chrisman,
Arthur Bowie. Enter a world of dragons, magicians, and other wondrous
creatures in this delightful collection of Chinese folk tales.
1924: 6.7/12 Dark Frigate Hawe, Charles.
In 17th century England, an accident forces orphaned Philip Marsham
to flee London in fear for his life. He signs on with the Rose
of Devon, a dark frigate. When the ship is seized in by a devious
group of men, Philip is forced to accompany these "gentleman
of fortune" on their murderous expeditions.
1923: 5.7/11 Voyages of Doctor Dolittle
Lofting, Hugh. The voyages of Doctor Dolittle and his company
lead them to Spidermonkey Island. He and his companions survive
a perilous shipwreck and lands on the mysterious floating island.
There he meets the wondrous Great Glass Sea Snail who holds the
key to the greatest mystery of all. |