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Award-Winning Books

English Titles

Josepha: A Prairie Boy's Story Elizabeth Mrazik-Cleaver Canadian Picture Book Award
(International Board on Books for Young People - Canada)
For best illustrations.
Josepha: A Prairie Boy's Story
Jim McGugan
Illustrations: Murray Kimber
Red Deer, Alta.: Red Deer College Press, 1994, 32 p.
ISBN 0889951012
Ages 9 and up

Cover reproduced by permission of Red Deer College Press.

Josepha is the poignant story of a gawky, gangling 14-year-old immigrant boy, at the turn of the century, who is forced to sit in the primary row at his prairie schoolhouse because he doesn't speak enough English. With bold strokes and vivid imagery, the story explores Josepha's relationships with the younger school children and, at the same time, explains his deep need for independence. The award-winning illustrations, which sweep across the pages in rich prairie hues of yellow, gold, orange, and blue, speak of the determination of the human spirit against a backdrop of the vast prairie landscape.


The Dream Carvers Geoffrey Bilson Award for Historical Fiction for Young People
(Canadian Children's Book Centre)
For best historical fiction book.
The Dream Carvers
Joan Clark
Toronto: Viking, 1995, 226 p.
ISBN 0670858587
Ages 14 and up
Cover reproduced by permission of Penguin Books Canada Limited. Cover illustration: Paul McCusker, cover design: Renée Cuthbertson.

It is the year 1015 and 14-year-old Thrand, a Greenland Viking, is abducted by a Native clan while part of an expedition to Newfoundland. Although he is as bewildered by his red-ochred captors as they are by his paleness, racial and cultural differences are surpassed as he learns to respect and understand the beliefs of these gentle people. While he gradually wins acceptance into the community, his greatest challenges are in overcoming his desire to return home, and in winning the trust of Abidith, a strong-willed and spiritually gifted young Native woman, who can see into his dreams. An intriguing work of fiction about some of Newfoundland's earliest residents.


The Maestro Governor General's Literary Award/Children's Literature
(The Canada Council)
For best text.
The Maestro
Tim Wynne-Jones
Vancouver: A Groundwood Book, Douglas & McIntyre, 1996, ©1995, 223 p.
ISBN 0888992637
Ages 12 and up
Cover reproduced by permission of Douglas & McIntyre Ltd.

On a beautiful spring day, hopeful, wary Burl Crow follows his abusive father through the verdant undergrowth of Northern Ontario. In a scene fraught with the potential for violence, the two characters are interrupted by an unexpected and wondrous sight. A grand piano hanging from a low-flying helicopter appears in the hot blue May sky and sets the tone for the rest of the novel. Burl's flight from home, his encounters with a world-famous pianist and others, his search for independence and self-realization are described with lyrical, fast-paced sensibility in this novel which celebrates the optimism and potential of youth.


The Last Quest of Gilgamesh Governor General's Literary Award/Children's Literature
(The Canada Council)
For best illustrations.
The Last Quest of Gilgamesh
Retold by Ludmila Zeman
Illustrations: Ludmila Zeman
Montreal: Tundra Books, 1995, 24 p.
ISBN 0887763286
Ages 6 and up
Available in French:
La Dernière Quête de Gilgamesh
(Montréal: Livres Toundra, 1995)
Cover reproduced by pemission of Tundra Books.

Fearful of the effect of his death upon his people, Gilgamesh, the mighty, all-powerful king of Uruk (a city-state in ancient Mesopotamia) sets out to find the secret of immortality. He faces many challenges and overcomes much adversity on his long and arduous quest. In the end he learns that death is inevitable; it is through courage and good deeds that he will live on in people's hearts and memories. In this retelling of one of the world's oldest stories, Ludmila Zeman's deceptively simple text and powerful other-worldly illustrations are used to good effect to transmit the enigmas of the past and the mysteries of the human condition.


A Pioneer Story: The Daily Life of a Canadian Family in 1840 Information Book Award
(The Children's Literature Roundtables of Canada)
For best non-fiction book.
A Pioneer Story: The Daily Life of a Canadian Family in 1840
Barbara Greenwood
Illustrations: Heather Collins
Toronto: Kids Can Press, 1994, 240 p.
ISBN 155074237X (bound), 1550741284 (paperback)
Ages 9 and up
Cover reproduced by permission of Kids Can Press Ltd.

Step back in time with the Robertson family  --  Ma, Pa, their six children, and Granny  --  to learn about life in backwoods Ontario in 1840. From the opening chapter, when 10-year-old Sarah finds the first egg of the year, to the last, when she eats oatcakes to celebrate Hogmanay, the reader will be enchanted with a cornucopia of facts, fiction, and detailed illustrations which document the daily routines and special events of this fictionalized but competely believable and endearing pioneer family. Other commendable features are the suggested activities, an index, and a glossary of difficult terms.

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Date Created: 2001-05-29
Date Modified: 2002-09-25

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