Annual award for writing a book for young adults, from U.S. librarians
The Michael L. Printz Award is an American Library Association literary award that annually recognizes the "best book written for teens, based entirely on its literary merit ". It is sponsored by Booklist magazine; administered by the ALA's young-adult division, the Young Adult Library Services Association (YALSA); and named for the Topeka, Kansas , school librarian Mike Printz, a long-time active member of YALSA.[ 1]
Up to four worthy runners-up may be designated Honor Books and three or four have been named every year.
History
The Printz Award was founded in 2000 for 1999 young adult publications.[ 2] The award "was created as a counterpoint to the Newbery " in order to highlight the best and most literary works of excellence written for a young adult audience.[ 3]
Jonathon Hunt, a Horn Book reviewer, hopes that the Printz Award can create a "canon as revered as that of the Newbery."[ 4]
Michael L. Printz was a librarian at Topeka West High School in Topeka, Kansas, until he retired in 1994.[ 5] He was also an active member of YALSA, serving on the Best Books for Young Adults Committee and the Margaret A. Edwards Award Committee.[ 6] He dedicated his life to ensuring that his students had access to good literature. To that end he encouraged writers to focus on the young adult audience. He created an author-in-residence program at the high school to promote new talent and encourage his students. His most noteworthy find was Chris Crutcher .[ 2] Printz died at the age of 59 in 1996.[ 7]
Criteria and procedure
Source: "The Michael L. Printz Award Policies and Procedures"[ 8]
The selection committee comprises nine YALSA members appointed by the president-elect for a one-year term. They award one winner and honor up to four additional titles.[ 2] The term 'young adult' refers to readers from ages 12 through 18 for purposes of this award.[ 9] The Michael L. Printz Award is sponsored by Booklist, a publication of the American Library Association (ALA).[ 10]
Non-fiction, fiction, poetry and anthologies are all eligible to receive the Printz Award.
Books must have been published between January 1 and December 31 of the year preceding the announcement of the award.
Titles must be designated 'young adult' by its publisher or published for the age range that YALSA defines as "young adult," i.e., 12 through 18. Adult books are not eligible.
Works of joint authorship or editorship are eligible.
The award may be issued posthumously.
Books previously published in another country are eligible (presuming an American edition has been published during the period of eligibility).
Recipients
The Printz Medal has been awarded for one work annually without exception.[ 11] Only A. S. King has received the award twice, one for a single-authored book in 2020 and another as editor and contributor to an anthology in 2024.[ 12]
Printz Award winners and runners-up
Year
Author
Book
Result
Ref.
2000
Walter Dean Myers
Monster
Winner
[ 13]
David Almond
Skellig
Honor
Laurie Halse Anderson
Speak
Ellen Wittlinger
Hard Love
2001
David Almond
Kit's Wilderness
Winner
Carolyn Coman
Many Stones
Honor
Carol Plum-Ucci
The Body of Christopher Creed
Louise Rennison
Angus, Thongs and Full-Frontal Snogging
Terry Trueman
Stuck In Neutral
2002
An Na
A Step From Heaven
Winner
Peter Dickinson
The Ropemaker
Honor
Jan Greenberg
Heart to Heart: New Poems Inspired by Twentieth-Century American Art
Chris Lynch
Freewill
Virginia Euwer Wolff
True Believer
2003
Aidan Chambers
Postcards from No Man's Land
Winner
Nancy Farmer
The House of the Scorpion
Honor
Garret Freymann-Weyr
My Heartbeat
Jack Gantos
Hole in My Life
2004
Angela Johnson
The First Part Last
Winner
Jennifer Donnelly
A Northern Light
Honor
Helen Frost
Keesha's House
K. L. Going
Fat Kid Rules the World
Carolyn Mackler
The Earth, My Butt, and Other Big Round Things
2005
Meg Rosoff
How I Live Now
Winner
Kenneth Oppel
Airborn
Honor
Allan Stratton
Chanda's Secrets
Gary D. Schmidt
Lizzie Bright and the Buckminster Boy
2006
John Green
Looking for Alaska
Winner
[ 14]
Margo Lanagan
Black Juice
Honor
Markus Zusak
I Am the Messenger
Elizabeth Partridge
John Lennon: All I Want Is the Truth, a Photographic Biography
Marilyn Nelson
A Wreath for Emmett Till
2007
Gene Luen Yang
American Born Chinese
Winner
M. T. Anderson
The Pox Party (Octavian Nothing, Vol I)
Honor
John Green
An Abundance of Katherines
Sonya Hartnett
Surrender
Markus Zusak
The Book Thief
2008
Geraldine McCaughrean
The White Darkness
Winner
Elizabeth Knox
Dreamquake
Honor
Judith Clarke
One Whole and Perfect Day
A. M. Jenkins
Repossessed
Stephanie Hemphill
Your Own Sylvia
2009
Melina Marchetta
Jellicoe Road
Winner
M. T. Anderson
The Kingdom on the Waves (Octavian Nothing, Vol II)
Honor
E. Lockhart
The Disreputable History of Frankie Landau-Banks
Terry Pratchett
Nation
Margo Lanagan
Tender Morsels
2010
Libba Bray
Going Bovine
Winner
[ 15]
Deborah Heiligman
Charles and Emma: The Darwins' Leap of Faith
Honor
Rick Yancey
The Monstrumologist
Adam Rapp
Punkzilla
John Barnes
Tales of the Madman Underground: An Historical Romance, 1973
2011
Paolo Bacigalupi
Ship Breaker
Winner
Lucy Christopher
Stolen
Honor
A.S. King
Please Ignore Vera Dietz
Marcus Sedgwick
Revolver
Janne Teller
Nothing
2012
John Corey Whaley
Where Things Come Back
Winner
Daniel Handler
Why We Broke Up
Honor
Christine Hinwood
The Returning
Craig Silvey
Jasper Jones
Maggie Stiefvater
The Scorpio Races
2013
Nick Lake
In Darkness
Winner
[ 16]
Benjamin Alire Sáenz
Aristotle and Dante Discover the Secrets of the Universe
Honor
Elizabeth Wein
Code Name Verity
Terry Pratchett
Dodger
Beverley Brenna
The White Bicycle
2014
Marcus Sedgwick
Midwinterblood
Winner
Rainbow Rowell
Eleanor & Park
Honor
Susann Cokal
Kingdom of Little Wounds
Sally Gardner
Maggot Moon
Clare Vanderpool
Navigating Early
2015
Jandy Nelson
I'll Give You the Sun
Winner
Jessie Ann Foley
The Carnival at Bray
Honor
Jenny Hubbard
And We Stay
Andrew Smith
Grasshopper Jungle
Mariko Tamaki
This One Summer
2016
Laura Ruby
Bone Gap
Winner
Ashley Hope Pérez
Out of Darkness
Honor
Marcus Sedgwick
The Ghosts of Heaven
2017
John Lewis , Andrew Aydin , and Nate Powell
March: Book Three
Winner
Louise O'Neill
Asking for It
Honor
Julie Berry
The Passion of Dolssa
Neal Shusterman
Scythe
Nicola Yoon
The Sun Is Also a Star
2018
Nina LaCour
We Are Okay
Winner
[ 17]
Angie Thomas
The Hate U Give
Honor
Jason Reynolds
Long Way Down
Deborah Heiligman
Vincent and Theo: The Van Gogh Brothers
Laini Taylor
Strange the Dreamer
2019
Elizabeth Acevedo
The Poet X
Winner
[ 18]
Elana K. Arnold
Damsel
Honor
Deb Caletti
A Heart in a Body in the World
Mary McCoy
I, Claudia
2020
A. S. King
Dig
Winner
[ 19] [ 20]
Nahoko Uehashi with Cathy Hirano (trans.)
The Beast Player
Honor
Mariko Tamaki with Rosemary Valero-O’Connell (illus.)
Laura Dean Keeps Breaking Up with Me
Nikki Grimes
Ordinary Hazards: A Memoir
Geraldine McCaughrean
Where the World Ends
2021
Daniel Nayeri
Everything Sad Is Untrue (a true story)
Winner
[ 21] [ 22]
Eric Gansworth
Apple (Skin to the Core)
Honor
[ 21]
Gene Luen Yang with Lark Pien (color)
Dragon Hoops
Candice Iloh
Every Body Looking
Traci Chee
We Are Not Free
2022
Angeline Boulley
Firekeeper's Daughter
Winner
[ 23]
Angie Thomas
Concrete Rose
Honor
[ 23]
Malinda Lo
Last Night at the Telegraph Club
Kekla Magoon
Revolution In Our Time : The Black Panther Party’s Promise to the People
Lisa Fipps
Starfish
2023
Sabaa Tahir
All My Rage
Winner
[ 24] [ 25]
Lily Anderson
Scout's Honor
Honor
[ 24]
A. L. Graziadei
Icebreaker
Sacha Lamb
When the Angels Left the Old Country
Eliot Schrefer
Queer Ducks (and Other Animals): The Natural World of Animal Sexuality
2024
A. S. King (ed.), written by King, M. T. Anderson , E.E. Charlton-Trujillo , David Levithan , Cory McCarthy , Anna-Marie McLemore , Greg Neri , Jason Reynolds , Randy Ribay , and Jenny Torres Sanchez
The Collectors: Stories
Winner
[ 26]
Moa Backe Åstot [sv ] with Eva Apelqvist (trans.)
Fire From the Sky
Honor
[ 26]
Kenneth M. Cadow
Gather
Shannon Gibney
The Girl I Am, Was, and Never Will Be: A Speculative Memoir of Transracial Adoption
Candice Iloh
Salt the Water
Multiple awards
As of 2024, only A. S. King has won the Printz twice;[ 12] she also received an Honor. Marcus Sedgwick and M. T. Anderson have written one Award winner and two Honor Books. David Almond , John Green , Geraldine McCaughrean , and Gene Luen Yang have written one Award winner and one Honor Book. Seven people have two Honor Books but have never won the Award: Margo Lanagan , Terry Pratchett , Markus Zusak , Deborah Heiligman , Mariko Tamaki , Candice Iloh , and Angie Thomas .
Six writers have won both the Printz Award and the annual Carnegie Medal from the British librarians: David Almond , Aidan Chambers , Geraldine McCaughrean , Meg Rosoff , Elizabeth Acevedo , and Jason Reynolds . Only Chambers and Acevedo have won both for the same book; Chambers won the 1999 Carnegie and 2003 Printz for Postcards from No Man's Land ,[ 11] [ 27] and Acevedo won the 2019 Carnegie and Printz for The Poet X .[ 28] [ 18]
In its scope, books for children or young adults (published in the UK), the British Carnegie corresponds to the American Newbery and Printz awards.
See also
References
^ "The Michael L. Printz Award for Excellence in Young Adult Literature" . Young Adult Library Services Association (YALSA ). American Library Association. (ALA ). Retrieved 2012-04-20.
^ a b c
Waddle, Linda. "The Association's Associations: YALSA Becomes Printz-Oriented. (Young Adult Library Services Association introduces Michael L. Printz Award) (Michael L. Printz Award) (Brief Article)". American Libraries 30.11 (Dec 1999): 7. Student Resource Center - Gold. Gale. Hennepin County Library. June 30, 2009.
^ Piper, Rachel (28 January 2015). "Brooke Young of the Printz Award Committee" . Salt Lake City Weekly . Retrieved 1 July 2015 .
^ Hunt, Jonathan (July 2009). "A Printz Retrospective" . Horn Book Magazine . 85 (4): 395–403. Retrieved 1 July 2015 .
^ HOLLINGSWORTH, HEATHER. "Book award named for former Topeka West librarian Michael Printz | CJOnline.com" . cjonline.com . Retrieved 2018-01-09 .
^ "Michael L. Printz Awards" . web.ccsu.edu .
^ American Libraries , March 1997, p. 76.
^
"The Michael L. Printz Award Policies and Procedures" . YALSA. ALA. Retrieved 2012-04-20.
^ "YALSA Awards Youth Books." Education Technology News 17.3 (Feb 2, 2000): NA. Student Resource Center - Gold. Gale. Hennepin County Library. June 30, 2009.
^ "Teen books honored". Reading Today 24.2 (Oct-Nov 2006): 12(1). Student Resource Center - Gold. Gale. Hennepin County Library. June 30, 2009.
^ a b
"Michael L. Printz Winners and Honor Books | Young Adult Library Services Association" . www.ala.org . Retrieved 2024-10-24 .
^ a b Yorio, Kara (January 22, 2024). " 'The Eyes and the Impossible' Wins the Newbery, 'Big' Earns Caldecott, and 'The Collectors: Stories' Takes the Printz Award at 2024 Youth Media Awards" . School Library Journal . Retrieved January 22, 2024 .
^ "Obituary Notes: Walter Dean Myers; Matt Richell" . Shelf Awareness . 2014-07-03. Retrieved 2023-06-16 .
^ "John Green: Wonders Are Never Far Away" . Shelf Awareness . 2021-06-18. Retrieved 2023-06-16 .
^ "Rebecca Stead Wins Newbery; Jerry Pinkney Wins Caldecott" . Shelf Awareness . 2010-01-19. Retrieved 2023-06-16 .
^ "Book Brahmin: Nick Lake" . Shelf Awareness . 2013-10-23. Retrieved 2023-06-16 .
^ "At ALA: Caldecott, Newbery, King, Printz Awards" . Shelf Awareness . 2018-02-13. Retrieved 2023-06-16 .
^ a b "Elizabeth Acevedo, Winner of the 2019 Michael L. Printz Award" . Shelf Awareness . 2019-01-31. Retrieved 2023-06-16 .
^ "A.S. King: Michael L. Printz Award Winner" . Shelf Awareness . 2020-02-28. Retrieved 2023-06-16 .
^ "2020 Printz Award" . Young Adult Library Services Association (YALSA) . 2021-01-25. Retrieved 2022-02-10 .
^ a b "2021 Printz Award" . Young Adult Library Services Association (YALSA) . 2022-01-24. Retrieved 2022-02-10 .
^ "Daniel Nayeri: 2021 Michael L. Printz Award Winner" . Shelf Awareness . 2021-01-28. Retrieved 2023-06-16 .
^ a b "Angeline Boulley: 2022 Michael L Printz Award Winner" . Shelf Awareness . 2022-01-25. Retrieved 2023-06-16 .
^ a b Communications and Marketing Office (2023-01-30). "American Library Association announces 2023 Youth Media Awards" (PDF) . American Library Association . Retrieved 2023-02-01 .
^ "2023 Michael L. Printz Award Winner Sabaa Tahir" . Shelf Awareness . 2023-03-17. Retrieved 2023-06-16 .
^ a b " 'The Collectors: Stories' wins 2024 Printz Award" (Press release) . ALA. January 22, 2024. Retrieved January 22, 2024 .
^ "Internet Archive: Service Availability" . web.archive.org . Retrieved 2024-10-24 .
^ Flood, Alison (2019-06-18). "Carnegie medal goes to first writer of colour in its 83-year history" . The Guardian . ISSN 0261-3077 . Retrieved 2024-10-24 .
External links