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Ezra Jack Keats Foundation Celebrates 35th Anniversary of Annual Book Award

Tue, 03/09/2021 - 09:56am | By: Margaret Ann Macloud

(EJK Foundation), in partnership with the (Â鶹´«Ă˝), today announced the winners of the 2021(EJK Award), as well as five honorees. , with the theme of “Advancing Diversity in Children’s Literature,” the annual EJK Award honors exceptional early career authors and illustrators for portraying the multicultural nature of our world in the spirit of Ezra Jack Keats. This year, the virtual award ceremony will be held on April 13, 2021 during the Fay B. Kaigler Children’s Book Festival at Â鶹´«Ă˝ in Hattiesburg, Mississippi.

The 2021 Ezra Jack Keats Award winner for Writer is:

for Nana Akua Goes to School Illustrated by April Harrison

Published by Schwartz & Wade, an imprint of Penguin Random House

The 2021 Ezra Jack Keats Award winner for Illustrator is:

for Brick by Brick

Written by Heidi Woodward Sheffield

Published by Nancy Paulsen Books, an imprint of Penguin Random House

The 2021 Ezra Jack Keats Award Honor winners are:

Writer Honors

for Can Bears Ski? (illustrated by Polly Dunbar, published by Candlewick Press)

for The Old Truck (illustrated by Jarrett and Jerome Pumphrey, published by Norton Young Readers, an imprint of W.W. Norton & Company)

Illustrator Honors

for I'm Sticking with You (written by Smriti Prasadam-Halls, published by Henry Holt and Company, an imprint of Macmillan)

for Cyclops of Central Park (written by Madelyn Rosenberg, published by G.P. Putnam's Sons Books for Young Readers, an imprint of Penguin Random House)

“When this award was launched 35 years ago our goal was to encourage talented bookmakers and publishers to produce outstanding books that reflect children from the widest spectrum of ethnic backgrounds. We wanted to help create the library of the future in which children could see themselves and learn to identify with others. Looking back over the artists and books recognized over three and half decades, including our 35th Anniversary winners and honorees, it is thrilling beyond words to see we’ve succeeded.” said Deborah Pope, Executive Director of the EJK Foundation.

According to Ellen Ruffin, curator of The de Grummond Children's Literature Collection at The University of Â鶹´«Ă˝, “The work of the de Grummond has always been to promote the understanding that children’s books are an important and influential part of our national heritage. As co-producers of the EJK Award and the 35th Anniversary we’re proud to support the classics of the future, books that uplift the many different children in schools and libraries across the country.”

On winning the award, Tricia Elam Walker said, “My mother, a children’s librarian, desperately sought books that reflected the experiences of black people and was bereft at the dearth. She wanted them for all children because she believed the world would be a better place if our value was understood. When The Snowy Day appeared, we celebrated the warm velvety brown of Peter and the quiet ordinariness of the story itself. It didn’t shout it’s arrival; it preferred a measured tone so readers gently learned the lessons of diversity and acceptance embedded in those pages. I thought of my mother first when I learned I won the EJK award.Thank you EJK Award Committee. This means that my mission to illuminate and celebrate difference is appreciated and that perhaps more children of all colors will embrace it. “

On winning the award, Heidi Woodward Sheffield said, “I am so incredibly honored to receive the Ezra Jack Keats Award for Illustrator of Brick by Brick. To me, the most powerful thing about Keats was his belief that all children need and deserve to see themselves represented in books, especially at this moment in time. I believe the healing power of books to spread hope, encouragement and empowerment is more important than ever for the children and people of our world.”

The EJK Award is celebrating its 35th year anniversary in 2021. Since its inception,have received EJK Awards and Honors for portraying the multicultural nature of our world, including renowned bookmakers Meg Medina, Christian Robinson, Bryan Collier, and Sophie Blackall. For more information about the 35th Anniversary Celebration, which includes author events, a Silent Auction, and a new documentary film about the evolution of diversity in American children's literature and the impact of Ezra Jack Keats. .

 

About the Ezra Jack Keats Award

Co-produced by the Ezra Jack Keats Foundation and the de Grummond Children’s Literature Collection at The University of Â鶹´«Ă˝, the Ezra Jack Keats Award (for illustration, writing, and honors in both categories) was established to recognize and encourage emerging talent in the field of children’s books. Aof children’s literature and early childhood education specialists, librarians, authors and illustrators reviews the entries, seeking engaging books that portray the universal qualities of childhood, a strong and supportive family, and the multicultural nature of our world.

 

About the Ezra Jack Keats Foundation

The Ezra Jack Keats Foundation has actively fostered children’s creativity and love of reading since 1985. The Foundation awards 70 EJK Mini-Grants annually to public schools and libraries, for arts and literacy programs across 50 states; administers the EJK Bookmaking Competition, for grades 3-12, in the nation's largest school system for 34 years running; and with the EJK Award, has encouraged 95 exceptional early career authors and illustrators to create children’s books that reflect our diverse culture. In celebration of the 35th Anniversary of the EJK Award in 2021, the Foundation created a year-long public awareness and educational campaign. The EJK Foundation is proud to protect and promote the work of Ezra Jack Keats.

 

About Ezra Jack Keats and The Snowy Day

(1916-1983) was a pioneer in American children’s literature. Afterwas awarded the Caldecott Medal, the most prestigious children’s book award for illustration in the United States, Keats followed it up with 24 books, most of which he both wrote and illustrated. He based the lives of his multiracial characters on his childhood but added loving parents, friends and pets. He wanted no child to be an outsider. “If we could see each other exactly as the other is,” he wrote, “this would be a different world.” He is considered one of the greatest American children's book illustrators/authors of the last century.

 

First published in 1962, the now-classic The Snowy Day broke the color barrier in mainstream children’s publishing by being embraced across social and ethnic lines. The vivid and ageless illustrations and text, beloved by generations of readers, have earned a place in the pantheon of great American children’s literature. In January 2020, New York Public Library revealed that The Snowy Day was the most circulated book in its 125-year history, and in 2017 the U.S. Postal Service issued .

 

About the de Grummond Children’s Literature Collection

The de Grummond Children's Literature Collection is one of North America's leading research centers in the field of children's literature. Founded in 1966 by Dr. Lena Y. de Grummond, the Collection holds the original manuscripts and illustrations of more than 1,300 authors and illustrators, as well as 180,000+ published books dating from 1530 to the present. The collection contains the works of many notable authors and illustrators including Randolph Caldecott, John Newbery, Kate Greenaway, H.A. and Margret Rey, Ezra Jack Keats, and the papers of popular young adult author, John Green. Researchers from across the United States and around the world visit the collection on a regular basis to study its extensive holdings.

 

Contacts:

Tracy van Straaten, 35th Anniversary Publicity Director, tracy@tvsmediagroup.com Robyn L. Stein, 35th Anniversary Campaign Director, robyn@rlsteingroup.com