Libraries, Schools Join In - School Library Journal
Log In to your Account                Free Newsletter Subscription
Subscribe to SLJ Magazine


ADVERTISEMENT
You will be redirected to your destination in a few seconds.

Articles

NBCC Awards Book on Kid Lit Criticism

E-Mail This Link


Enter recipient's e-mail:


Close
Email
RSS |

By Rocco Staino -- School Library Journal, 03/16/2009

The National Book Critics Circle Awards (NBCC)  has recognized the often overlooked area of children’s literature, giving its 2009 award in the field of criticism to Seth Lerer’s Children’s Literature: A Reader’s History from Aesop to Harry Potter (University of Chicago, 2008).

The book charts makings of Western literary imagination from “Aesop’s fables to Mother Goose, from Alice's Adventures in Wonderland to Peter Pan, from Where the Wild Things Are to Harry Potter”—and reveals why J. R. R. Tolkien, Dr. Seuss, Laura Ingalls Wilder, Shel Silverstein, and many others, despite their divergent styles and subject matter, have all resonated with generations of readers.

Lerer, who serves as dean of Arts and Humanities at the University of California in San Diego, explores ancient and contemporary books that have forged a lifelong love of literature in young readers. Along the way, Lerer also examines the evolution of family life and human growth, as well as the schooling, scholarship, publishing and politics in which children found themselves changed by the books they read.

His work includes a broad range of influences—including Shakespeare’s plays, John Locke’s theories of education, Darwin’s On the Origin of Species, and the Puritan tradition.

Lerer says in his book that children’s literature “has forms and genres, an imaginative scope, a mastery of figurative language, an enduring cast of characters, a self-conscious sense of authorship, a poetics, a politics, a prose style.”

Commenting on the book, NBCC board member and book critic for the Philadelphia Inquirer, Carlin Romano said Lerer brought to his subject the critical acuity and unlimited openness it deserved. “He insisted on placing a complex literature within the history of childhood, a story both contested and blessedly clear. He took into account the cavalcade of publishing history, without permitting it to trample the imaginative “transformations” wrought by the books. He understood that his terrain included not just books written for children, but books read by them, driving home the critical spine signaled by his subtitle.”

Since 1974, the NBCC has selected books in six award categories, including poetry, autobiography, biography, general nonfiction, and fiction It is comprised of 900 book reviewers, and its 24-member board works in committees to select the finalist in each category .

Watch a video interview of Seth Lerer at the NBCC award ceremony.

E-Mail This Link


Enter recipient's e-mail:


Close
Email
RSS |




 
Advertisement

SLJ Reviews Database

SLJ Reviews Center

Latest Stories


From the Blogs


Advertisements




Connect with SLJ


Follow on Twitter






About Us | Advertising Information | Submissions | Site Map | Contact Us | For Reviewers | RSS | Subscriptions
©2011 Media Source, Inc., All rights reserved.
Use of this Web site is subject to its Terms of Use | Privacy Policy
Media Source Inc. Media Source Inc. Media Source Inc. Media Source Inc. Media Source Inc. Media Source Inc.