Category Archives: CSK Award Winners

Dr. Claudette McLinn Interviews CSK Award Winner Javaka Steptoe

Javaka Steptoe won the Coretta Scott King Illustrator Award in 1998, which was his first major book award. Since then, Steptoe has created a body of work as an illustrator and author and garnered many awards in the field of children’s literature. He recently won the 2017 Coretta Scott King Illustrator Award for his book, Radiant Child: The Story of Young Jean-Michel Basquiat. We caught up with Javaka Steptoe, who has been busy traveling outside the United States and touring the children’s literature scene.

CSM: Coretta Scott King Book Awards, which will turn 50 in 2019, was the first award to recognize your work. You won the 1998 Coretta Scott King Illustrator Award for the book, In Daddy’s Arms I am Tall. How did the Coretta Scott King Book Award help your career?

JS: This Coretta Scott King Book Awards is looked at as an award of excellence in the children’s book industry, most of all for children’s books of color. It is a major award to start off one’s career.  It put me on the radar of many publishers and made it easy for me to illustrate my next book, Do You Know What I’ll Do? by Charlotte Zolotow.

CSM: You have produced a body of work for children of all ages from Radiant Child; to Jimi: Sounds like a Rainbow; to Sweet, Sweet, Baby, which is one of my favorites; and many more books. What do you hope your readers will know or feel when they finish one of your books?

JS: It depends on the book. Whatever the book is saying, that’s what I want the reader to feel. Not on a superficial level but deep in their bones.  For example, with Sweet, Sweet Baby, I want the reader to feel the love between mother and child.

JS: I am also interested in complexity. There are lots of ways to talk about a subject. You can talk about it superficially or with depth and nuances. The latter creates a book you can grow with.

CSM: For a young man, it seems like you work all of the time. What do you do for fun?

JS: I read books—science fiction, fantasy, and mysteries. I like books that make you think about the world in a different way.  I also dance. I am always taking dance classes such as African Dance, Salsa, Improvisation, and Swing.

CSM: You have accomplished so much so far. What do you see in your future?

JS: Just to keep writing. Keep illustrating. I am interested in strengthening my ability as a writer. I’m also interested in the development of books. My belief is that there will always be paper books. They have a certain quality that cannot be replaced by technology. I see technology as a tool to help expand ideas and content within books.

CSM: Is there anything else you would like to say?

JS: [I would like to say] whatever you do, do it because you love it.

Javaka Steptoe is the son of award-winning author and illustrator John Steptoe and Stephanie Douglas. Both parents were artists. The Coretta Scott King John Steptoe New Talent Award was established in 1995 and named in memory of his father.

Dr. Claudette McLinn is Chair of the Coretta Scott King Book Awards Committee.  She is the Executive Director of the Center for the Study of Multicultural Children’s Literature.

Being the Change He Hopes to See: Gregory Christie’s Contribution to Community

Visit Decatur, Georgia, and you’ll quickly notice that it’s one of the most eclectic neighborhoods in Atlanta.  Down the road from the African American storefronts and mega-churches, nightclubs, and braiding salons are trendy haunts and quietly plush homes where the upper middle class raise their families.  Just beyond this, a vibrant South Asian community has flowered and brought with it jewelers, sari shops, grocery stores, and beauty salons.  In the thick of it all is GAS-Art Gifts Autographed Children’s Bookstore owned and operated by Coretta Scott King Book Award-winning illustrator R. Gregory Christie.

GAS-Art Gifts, short for Gregarious Art Statements, is unique.  Located inside Decatur’s North Dekalb Mall, it blends the feeling of an upscale art gallery with a come-one-come-all community center where visitors can choose to engage their own creativity or simply shop.

Opening a store was a chance opportunity that came when an art dealer operating in the mall invited Christie to display his books for Black History Month.  “Black grandmothers and soccer moms of all ethnicities cleared my table off each week.  And before I knew it, I had to keep ordering cases of books to keep up with the demand,” Christie says, sounding both amused and deeply appreciative.

From there, he transformed what he describes as a raw and uninviting space into what can now only be described as a brightly hued oasis.  It’s the kind of space that Christie would have appreciated having when growing up in suburban New Jersey, where museums and art education were sparse.  He drew inspiration from any place he could, namely the library and public television.  “Art was a savior for me, says Christie, “It built my self-esteem.” Over time, art also opened doors for him to live abroad in various European cities. Ones where he says, “If someone decides, ‘I want to be an Egyptologist,’ they can study that, and they don’t have to go broke.” He wants to share that same expansive vision with his young customers.

Christie says that he spends about seventy hours a week working in his store.  “I do everything from sweeping the floor to cleaning the toilets to shaking the hands of anyone who comes in.”  And because GAS-Art Gifts also serves as his studio, it gives his young and old visitors the rare opportunity to see an artist at work.  Getting to meet his book-buying audience is gratifying.  He says, “It keeps an internal balance for me.  I can have a flow of words and consciousness.  What I’m thinking can be expressed because I’m always speaking to people.”

Christie goes on to add, “Because this mall has been good to me, I pass it on to the customer.”  He does this by offering affordable individual and group instruction as well as paint parties for children and adults.  And while he says that his motivation is to address some of the grave inner deficits that he sees growing in society, he emphasizes that his store is a service, not a charity.  “Yes, this shop is for profit.  But, it’s very fair.”

While serving the community, Christie has also found time to help promote the work of The Sweet Blackberry Foundation, with whom he has collaborated to make animated films.  These accompany the books that he and the actress Karyn Parsons have created to tell the stories of marginalized African American achievers.

Creating new work, appearing at festivals, doing school visits, and managing a store may seem like a lot for some.  But Gregory Christie seems to believe in the old African American adage of lifting as one climbs.  “Maybe thirty years of my life have been spent learning everything I can.  Bookbinding, sculpture, painting, photography.  I’ve gained a lot of knowledge, and I want to teach people things that I wish I’d known.”

Post by Jené Watson

Jené Watson works as a public librarian at a system in suburban Atlanta, where she coordinates Books in the Barbershop and family meditation programs.  She is the author of The Spirit That Dreams: Conversations with Women Artists of Color.

The 48th Annual Coretta Scott King Book Awards Breakfast

This year’s Coretta Scott King Book Awards Breakfast, held early Sunday morning, June 25th, in Chicago at the Hilton, sold out twice! Everyone was excited to celebrate the 2017 CSK winning authors and illustrators, the winner of the John Steptoe Award for New Talent, and the recipient of the Virginia Hamilton Award for Lifetime Achievement.

Dr. Pauletta Bracy, Chair of the Coretta Scott Book Awards Committee,  provided a welcome, Pastor Kimberly Ray of Angie Ray Ministries delivered the invocation, and ALA president Dr. Julie Todaro spoke. Breakfast was served.

Then the awards were presented. Nicola Yoon was awarded the  John Steptoe Award for New Talent for The Sun Is Also a Star (Delacorte Press).

Coretta Scott Illustration Honors were awarded to R. Gregory Christie for Freedom in Congo Square (author Carole Boston Weatherford, Little Bee Books); Jerry Pinkney for In Plain Sight (author Richard Jackson, Neal Porter/Roaring Brook Press); and Ashley Bryan for Freedom over Me: Eleven Slaves, Their Lives and Dreams Brought to Life (author Ashley Bryan, Atheneum).

Ashley Bryan was also awarded a Coretta Scott King Author Honor for Freedom over Me: Eleven Slaves, Their Lives and Dreams Brought to Life (illustrator Ashley Bryan, Atheneum). Jason Reynolds was awarded a Coretta Scott King Author Honor for As Brave as You (Atheneum).

The Coretta Scott King Illustrator Award was presented to Javaka Steptoe for Radiant Child: The Story of Young Artist Jean-Michel Basquiat (author Javaka Steptoe, Little Brown). Read Javaka Steptoe’s acceptance speech here as printed in The Horn Book.

The Coretta Scott King Author winners were Congressman John Lewis and Andrew Aydin for the third volume of the March Trilogy (illustrator Nate Powell, Top Shelf). Nate Powell spoke for Andrew Aydin, who could not be present, and Congressman Lewis spoke, receiving his award. The acceptance speeches were not received in time to be published in the current edition of The Horn Book but can be viewed here.

The Virginia Hamilton Award for Lifetime Achievement was awarded to Dr. Rudine Sims Bishop. Read Dr. Bishop’s acceptance speech here as printed in The Horn Book.

Dr. Rudine Sims Bishop chaired the 2017 Coretta Scott Book Awards Committee Jury. Other jury members included Kacie V. Armstrong, Sam Bloom, Erica T. Marks, April Roy, Martha V. Parravano, and Ida W. Thompson.

Posted by Susan Polos

The Heart and Center

Love. Family. Science. Poetry. Deportation? A fascinating mix of subjects that Nicola Yoon blends very well in her story The Sun is Also a Star, the 2017 Coretta Scott King John Steptoe Award for New Talent.

At the heart of this story is a romance between Natasha, a Jamaican, and Daniel, a Korean American.  Natasha is a realist, stating scientific and mathematical facts and figures.  Daniel, on the other hand, is a poet who speaks from the heart.  When they meet in New York, Daniel believes Natasha is “the one,” while Natasha is reluctant to accept feelings and sticks to the facts.  For an intense 12 hours in New York City, Natasha and Daniel grapple with their feelings, Natasha’s possible deportation, and their families.

However, The Sun is Also a Star is more than a love story.  It is also a story about Natasha’s and Daniel’s family and their cultures. Yoon carefully reveals the family history and culture in short vignettes.  Connecting these stories, one learns why Natasha is facing deportation and why Daniel’s family owns an African American hair supply store.

Young people will love the intense relationship between Natasha and Daniel. Teachers, on the other hand, will try to figure out how to include this book into their curriculum/and or literary study.  The Sun is Also a Star can spark many ideas and activities. Love is such a universal theme that books like The Sun is Also a Star would easily fit in with other love stories.  Comparing and contrasting love between characters from different cultures could be compared to other love stories with characters from different backgrounds.  Studies in Jamaican and Korean culture would give students a greater understanding of different cultures.  Immigration laws, particularly during this time, would certainly be a good topic for any Government/Social Studies course.  Because the sun is really a star, students can state  scientific facts while also making literary inferences and meaning from the title.

By Karen Lemmons

Walter Dean Myers Inducted into New York State Writers Hall of Fame

Connie Myers                                                Photo Credit: Sara Kelly Johns

Walter Dean Myers was inducted into the New York State Writers Hall of Fame, Class of 2017, at the New York Center for the Book Induction ceremony on Monday, June 5,2017,  at the Princeton Club in New York City.

Master-of-Ceremonies William Schwalbe noted that among Myers’ many accomplishments are  five Coretta Scott King Awards as well as two Newbery Honors, the first Printz Award and the Margaret A. Edwards Award for lifetime achievement. Myers, the author of over 100 books, was also appointed by the Library of Congress as the National Ambassador for Young People’s Literature, a post he held from 2012- 2013.

Phoebe Yeh                                                        Photo Credit: Leonardo Mascaro

Phoebe Yeh, publisher of Crown Books, Random House, delivered a moving tributespeaking of Myers connections to New York, where he was raised by his father’s first wife, Florence Dean, after the death of his mother.

Accepting the plaque in Myer’s memory was his widow, Connie Myers.  Also in attendance were Andrea Davis Pinkney, Vice President and Editor-at-Large of Scholastic Press, Emily Heddleson, Senior Manager of Library and Educational Marketing for Scholastic, and Jessica MacLeish, Editor at HarperCollins.

This is the not the first recognition of Walter Dean Myers by the Empire State Center for the Book. In 2015 during Children’s Book Week, the Center for the Book together with United for Libraries and the Children’s Book Council honored Myers with the dedication of a Literary Landmark at the George Bruce Branch of the New York Public Library, the library Myers frequented as a child.

Rocco Staino, Director of the Empire State Center for the Book, notes that in Myers’ memoir, Bad Boy, Myers wrote, “Harlem is the first place called ‘home’ that I can remember.” This sense of New York as home is reflected in Myers’ writing, including the picture book Harlem and the novels Monster and Darius & Twig.  Staino also notes that Florence Dean taught Myers to read in their kitchen, and when he began attending Public School 125, he could read at a second grade level.

Other writers in the Class of 2017 include Lillian Ross, Frederick Law Olmsted, Alexander Hamilton, Ron Chernow, Christopher Morley and William Kennedy.

By Susan Polos

Throwback Thursday: June is Black Music Month

One way to celebrate “June is Black Music Month” is certainly through listening to all kinds of African American music. From African drums to blues, jazz, r&b, and hip-hop and rap, there is a music genre for everyone. While listening to music, read a book, like I See the Rhythm, illustrated by Michele Wood and written by Toyomi Igus. Take a colorful and literary journey through this book, viewing the artwork, reading the poems, and studying the historical timeline. A 1999 CSK Illustrator Award Winner, Michele Wood’s beautiful illustrations synchronize with Igus’ lyrical poetic beats to the different musical styles. The historical timeline provides just enough information to spark interest in music, poetry and art. This book could be a catalyst for in-depth multimedia presentations on a particular music genre, or a particular historical period, or simply enjoyed as a celebration of African American music.

 

By Karen Lemmons

I See the Rhythm, illustrated by Michele Wood and written by Toyomi Igus
I See the Rhythm, illustrated by Michele Wood and written by Toyomi Igus

YMA Awards, CSK, Dr. Rudine Sims Bishop, and Congressman John Lewis: What a day!

Anticipation ran high as the crowd began to gather at 6:00 a.m. for the 8:00 a.m. American Library Association Youth Media Awards on Monday, January 23, 2017, held in the Georgia World Conference Center in Atlanta, Georgia.

Many distinguished books were published in 2016; the buzz and enthusiasm were practically palatable as one entered the rapidly filling room.   As the committees entered to sit in the reserved spaces, we got a shot of the Coretta Scott King committee settling in.  The Coretta Scott King Award jury was chaired by Dr. Rudine Sims Bishop, who had a great day herself.  

Before the book awards were announced, we learned that Dr. Sims Bishop was honored as the recipient of the Virginia Hamilton Award for Lifetime Achievement. After the standing ovation, CSK Awards Committee Chair Pauletta Brown Bracy had to ask Dr. Sims Bishop to stand so that the crowd could see her!

The CSK (Author) Medal was awarded to Congressman John Lewis, Andrew Aydin, and Nate Powell, who won an unprecedented number of awards for March: Book Three, including Printz, Sibert, and YALSA Nonfiction), while the CSK Andrew Aydin (Illustrator) Medal was awarded to Javaka Steptoe for Radiant Child: The Story of Young Artist Jean-Michel Basquiat. Steptoe also won the Caldecott Medal.

CSK  (Author) Honors were awarded to Jason Reynolds for As Brave As Me and Ashley Bryan for Freedom Over Me: Eleven Slaves, Their Lives and Dreams Brought to Life. Bryan also won a CSK (Illustrator) Honor for Freedom Over Me: Eleven Slaves, Their Lives and Dreams Brought to Life. CSK (Illustrator) Honors were also awarded to R. Gregory Christie for Freedom in Congo Square and Jerry Pinkney for In Plain Sight.

The John Steptoe New Talent Award was given to Nicole Yoon for The Sun is Also a Star.

Post by Liz Deskins