1 / 19

2012 CLA Young Adult Book Award

2012 CLA Young Adult Book Award. The Notables Session CLA Conference 2012, Ottawa Presented by Carol Rigby, YABA Jury Chair. About the Award & the Jury. About the Award. Outstanding Canadian title in English appealing to teens ages 13-18 Written by a Canadian or a landed immigrant

placido
Télécharger la présentation

2012 CLA Young Adult Book Award

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. 2012 CLA Young Adult Book Award The Notables Session CLA Conference 2012, Ottawa Presented by Carol Rigby, YABA Jury Chair

  2. About the Award & the Jury

  3. About the Award • Outstanding Canadian title in English appealing to teens ages 13-18 • Written by a Canadian or a landed immigrant • Published in Canada first • Fiction, short stories or graphic novel • Shortlist of 10 • One winner • Up to two honour books

  4. About the Jury • 2011-2012 members by length of term: • Carol Rigby, Chair • Barb Janicek • Kim Hebig • Stephanie Vollick • Carmelita Cousins

  5. Being a jury member can seem overwhelming… Stephanie described the situation on her blog back in January—while my husband grumbles about being a YA book orphan.

  6. Some general publishing trends observed in 2011 • Large increase in self-published submissions, including e-books, but seldom reaching the quality of books from recognized publishers • “Issue” books are still popular: family situation, self-esteem, social inequity, bullying, peer relations, substance use • Relatively little straight “genre” fiction—mysteries, horror, romance, SF, historical novels. Stories may have elements of these but blended into a larger framework or combining several. Fantasy is the strongest genre. • Lots of material dealing with the environment & a dystopian view of the future, with or without a fantasy twist

  7. The 2012 Shortlist In alphabetical order by title…..

  8. All Good Childrenby Catherine Austen 2012 Award Winner Published by Orca First nomination Trend: Dystopian fiction

  9. Fanaticsby William Bell Published by Random House Author was Award winner in 2007 for The Blue Helmet and in 2002 for Stones; multiple nominee Trend: strong male character

  10. The Gatheringby Kelley Armstrong Published by Random House First nomination for this popular author Trend: Paranormal elements, in this case shape-shifters or werecreatures

  11. Heldby Edeet Ravel Published by Annick Press First nomination Trend: Stories ripped from the headlines, multimedia approach

  12. Karmaby Cathy Ostlere Honour Book 2012 Published by Penguin Canada First nomination Trend: Verse novels

  13. My Beating Teenage Heartby C. K. Kelly Martin Published by Random House First nomination Trend: Issue novel: sibling death & suicidal impulses

  14. Once Every Neverby Lesley Livingston Published by Penguin Canada Author won Award in 2010 for Wondrous Strange Trend: Learn history through time travel

  15. This Dark Endeavourby Kenneth Oppel 2012 Honour Book Published by HarperCollins Canada Last year’s double award winner for Half-Brother; nominated several times Trend: New twists on classic stories: in this case, Frankenstein

  16. The Town that Drowned,by Riel Nason Published by Goose Lane Press First nomination for Riel Nason Trends: Including characters with special needs: the 60’s perception of autism

  17. The Woefield Poultry Collectiveby Susan Juby Published by Harper Collins Nominated for Another Kind of Cowboy in 2008 Trend: Cross-over adult novels of interest to teens

  18. Questions? • For further discussion of this year’s submitted titles, or a view of our longlist, please contact me at: cerigby@xplornet.com • You might also enjoy Stephanie Vollick’s teen reading blog with YA lit reviews, Libraries and Young Adults, at: http://libraryya.wordpress.com/ • Consider joining the CLASY network of CLA!

  19. Thank you for your interest Thanks to LSC for sponsoring the Award & to TD for sponsoring the award reception. For more information about the Award please visit the CLA websiteand check the book awards pages

More Related