- /Carnegie ; /Greenaway ; /Guardian ; /Newbery ; /Caldecott
- /VIAF ; /VIAF/Joint 2014
- /work --2012-12-23 redirect
- /Dickinson ; /Jones ; /Nimmo
- /Narnia
- Alexander/Prydain is one FSF neighbor with subpage
- Konigsburg is one FSF neighbor
- McCaffrey/Pern is several FSF neighbors (20121216 inclg the Sandbox neighbor)
Attention. There are two "Awards" sections. (among other things).
- Rachel Field 2016-03-04
- Rachel Lyman Field; Mrs. Arthur Siegfried Pederson
- ISFDB
- 24-29331 six plays
- 27-17819 The magic pawnshop; a New Year's eve fantasy, by Rachel Field, decorated by Elizabeth MacKinstry (E.P. Dutton, c1927)
- 31-28324 The yellow shop, by Rachel Field, illustrated by the author (Doubleday Doran, 1931)
- 29-2702 (HathiTrust) The white cat, and other old French fairy tales, by Mme. la comtesse d'Aulnoy, arranged by Rachel Field and drawn by E. MacKinstry (Macmillan, 1928) --per intro by EM, transl 1860s, abridged/arranged by Field
- 29-25017 American folk and fairy tales, selected by Rachel Field, with drawings by Margaret Freeman (Scribner's, 1929)
and Arthur Pederson, 1937 37-33909
https://lccn.loc.gov/n88030889 (20, all except PC Magazine wireless) https://uwaterloo.ca/english/people-profiles/neil-randall
VIAF=264175391 35175325 305000722 (lc undiff) same person, distinguished as two by the two Polish libraries and undifferentiated at LC
Categories and redirects
edit- 1
Template talk:R from fictional character#Two auto-populated categories
By the way, the latter is one of the 72 subcats in the former. They are siblings, too, and two of only three! subcats in Category:Fiction-based redirects to list entries.
Do we really have only 10 redirects from fictional places? (Template {{R from fictional place}} has been transcluded only 10 times, so that the auto-populated cat Redirects from fictional places contains only 10 pages.) Anyway, that cat should be another subcat in Category:Fiction-based redirects to list entries, I believe, as the latter is not really about lists.
Middle-earth stand apart from unique in our coverage of fiction? Perhaps not uniquely, as "Anime and manga" and "Comics" may have similar status; see eg Redirects by topic. --P64 (talk) 17:08, 16 March 2015 (UTC)
- Category:Anime and manga redirects, with character, element, episode "to lists" subcats
- Category:Comics redirects
- Geography
- Middle-earth
Redirects to list entries 5 subcats, 5434 pages inclg eg Lone Islands
- Category:Redirects from fictional characters – mainly TV but contains the Fchar rcats
- Category:Comics redirects to lists
- Category:Episode redirects to lists
- Category:Middle-earth redirects to lists
- Category:Fiction-based redirects to list entries
in turn, Fiction-based redirects to list entries
- also Redirected characters articles (TV only?)
- Category:All fictional element redirects – autopop
- 2
Wikipedia talk:Categorization#Clarification needed
- The software doesn't provide any special tools for informing readers that some incoming redirects are substantial, or displaying categories in which those redirects have been placed. Nor have we developed any equivalent practices using the general tools that are available --effective handmade links to those redirects. So the substantial categorization of redirects does not function for upward navigation.
- For instance, the redirect Janet Ahlberg is in cats British children's book illustrators and Kate Greenaway Medal winners. Our article about her, Janet and Allan Ahlberg, is not in those categories, nor does it provide any related notice, much less provide wikilinks. Editors as well as readers inevitably stumble; such articles are likely to be placed in categories that duplicate their incoming redirects, and deleted from those categories, by successive editors. (At the moment Janet and Allan Ahlberg is in her 1944 births and 1994 deaths categories. It is in the writers category, correctly by all accounts because she and he wrote separately, and also jointly.)
- --P64 (talk) 17:08, 16 March 2015 (UTC)
- 3
Archives
Wikipedia talk:Categorization/Archive 14#Eponymous categories (April 2012)
Wikipedia talk:Categorization/Archive 14#Portal rho, Template tau (5 May 2012), etc
Wikipedia talk:Categorization/Archive 14#Category prefaces (4 June 2012)
Wikipedia talk:Categorization/Archive 14#Set category (8 June 2012)
Wikipedia talk:Redirect/Archive 2013#Redirects to category space ((4 August 2013), etc
Wikipedia talk:Redirect/Archive 2013#Redirects for singles/songs to album article (5 December 2013)
Wikipedia talk:Categorizing redirects#"Most redirects should not ..." (18 December 2012)
- 4
Wikipedia talk:Authority control
Clinic Stanislaw Burzynski, 2014-01-05; 4 wd [1]
- Stanisław Burzyński -- fully protected with no content except the redirect definition and template {{R protected}}
father Fanny Holcroft, BDD 2014-09-26; 0 wd [2] no ID (Oxford Biography Index Number)
joint Sergio Blanco (singer), Vycl;
- eu:Sergio Blanco Rivas 1 wd [3] several ID
- wife Estíbaliz Uranga 2 wd [4] no ID (not even MusicBrainz)
- duo Sergio y Estíbaliz 5 wd [5] several ID
joint Kevin Kopelow, Vycl; not at wd; broken model at WD Kevin Kopelow and Heath Seifert
joint Heath Seifert, Vycl; 1 wd [6] no ID (IMDb)
joint David Maysles, Vycl; 1 wd [7] several ID
joint Albert Maysles, Vycl; 1 wd [8] several ID
joint Magda Trocmé, Vycl, Mirokado; 0 wd [9]; no ID
joint André Trocmé, Mirokado interlanguage diff (and Next diff); 6 wd [10]; several ID
add DEFAULTSORT, 3 cats Living, DoB PoB missing (no further action yet; see Wikipedia talk:Authority control#Coverage of Wikipedia redirects
- messed up at WikiData fr:Kevin Kopelow
- not at WD - Kopelow
- no links at WD - Holcroft
- CatScan V3.0
2015-03-22, Wikipedia talk:Authority control#Coverage of Wikipedia redirects
Category:Redirects from people (~1500); Category:Redirects from pseudonyms (~500)
Category:VIAF not on Wikidata (6414); Category:Wikipedia articles with VIAF identifiers (276K) do not intersect that giant for this purpose
- 2015-03-23 intersection = 10 (from people); 0 (from pseudonyms)
- Category:Wikipedia articles with LCCN identifiers (109K) = 9 (all but Sergio Blanco)
VIAF not on Wikidata is now equivalent here: the tracking category covers all these EN.wiki redirects because WD pages for these people do not link them
Historic newspapers
edit- 1997-11-27 [11] Mooar, Brian. " 'Misty' Author Marguerite Henry Dies at Age 95". The Washington Post. November 27, 1997. Page C7. Quote: "died Nov. 26 at her home in Rancho Santa Fe".
Lead paragraphs at HighBeam Research (highbeam.com); full text available by subscription. - 1997-11-29 NYT "Marguerite Henry, 95, Author Of the 'Chincoteague' Series". Wolfgang Saxon. The New York Times. November 29, 1997. Page A13.
- 1997-12-01 Washington Post [12] "Marguerite Henry's Legacy". p. A24
- (editorial)
- children's classics "the bread and butter of the communities where they are set" --for Assateague/Chincoteague as for Prince Edward Island and De Smet SD
- 1997-12-05 Philadelphia Tribune [weekly?] Dana Caivo, AP [13]
- AP obituary quotes Susan Foster Ambrose, family friend who cared for her "complications from several strokes". "When she wrote 'Chincoteague' she would go to the island and sit in the wildgrass and really get a feel for it."
- the latter quotation is unique to this source but Mooar quotes Ambrose otherwise
- "Marguerite Henry 1902–1997". Publisher's Weekly. December 15, 1997. p. 27.
- listed in the article by another editor
2015-02-13 the article cites all except the Caivo/AP obituary
Both Mooar and Saxon need much heavier use.
One vote cast on behalf of online poll
editNational Baseball Hall of Fame
The sports website Deadspin announced in November that "We'd Like to Buy Your Vote"—that is, to arrange for eligible writers to cast their ballots on behalf of a poll it would conduct online.[1] Such an arrangement was completed with one voter, Miami Herald columnist and ESPN radio and TV host Dan Le Batard, who remained anonymous until the official results of the election were announced in January. In exchange for a cash donation to charity, he completed his ballot according to the collective "vote" of those who participated in the December poll at Deadspin.[2] One day after the website revealed "our voter" and published his statement, on January 9 the BBWAA announced that it had suspended Le Batard for one year and had permanently revoked his eligibility to vote for the Hall of Fame.[3] ESPN ombudsman Robert Lipsyte reviewed the "caper" one week later.[4]
- ^ "Are You a Hall of Fame Voter? We'd Like to Buy Your Vote". Tim Marcham. November 13, 2013. Deadspin. Retrieved 2014-04-27.
- ^ "Revealed: The Hall Of Fame Voter Who Turned His Ballot Over To Deadspin". Tim Marchman. January 8, 2014. Deadspin. Retrieved 2014-04-27.
Includes statement by Le Batard. - ^ "BBWAA permanently strips Dan Le Batard of Hall-of-Fame vote". Nate Scott. USA Today. January 9, 2014. Retrieved 2014-04-27.
Includes statement by the BBWAA. - ^ Lipsyte, Robert (17 January 2014). "Lessons learned from Dan Le Batard caper". ESPN.com. Archived from the original on 17 January 2014.
{{cite news}}
: Unknown parameter|deadurl=
ignored (|url-status=
suggested) (help)
http://grantland.com/features/mlb-hall-fame-voting-steroid-era/ "The Steroid Hunt". Bryan Curtis. January 8, 2014. Grantland.
EBMA authors
edit/EBMA authors; de:Benutzer:p64de/EBMA authors
Misc. needs
editCategory:Redirects from writers
- Jennifer A. Nielsen might be another The False Prince
- Jennifer A. Nielsen at Library of Congress, with 7 library catalog records 2010–2015
Jennifer A. Nielsen at the Internet Speculative Fiction Database
- needs
Generally: search this user page, among others, for the word "needs"
Robin Preiss Glasser VIAF needs merge
Diana Cain Bluthenthal
VIAF=102678911 needs merge
- Spouses, etc (spice?)
Theo Black, Theodor Black, husband of Holly Black; 8 illustrator credits in ISFDB
Phoenix books notes
edit0. Talk:Sean O'Hagan (journalist)#Phoenix Books
1. Talk: The End of Time#Publication data
draft reply 2014-04-14
- Regarding the English-language eds, I agree except that we should give both subtitles even if we learn that one was not first.
- Phoenix generally publishes paperback editions Weidenfeld & Nicolson Ltd books, where WN was independent to 1991 and constituted the core of The Orion Publishing Group --or core of its backlist, books in progress, ed. staff, established writers-- from its establishment (presumably under some legal name that begins 'Orion') in 1991 --subsequently under Hachette and Lagardère SCA.
- I don't yet see that we need a page for the Phoenix (British imprint), except one or more redirects to Weidenfeld & Nicolson, Orion Publishing Group, maybe elsewhere too.
- For what's worth, template {{Lagardère}} now displays pagenmames that include four steps down -- Lagardère Group / Hachette (publisher) / Orion Publishing Group / Weidenfeld & Nicolson -- not now down to Phoenix. --and the word 'Phoenix' now appears only three and four steps down, in the two pages that the preceding paragraph links directly.
- The expansion of our one-line Orion-Phoenix stub (version Oct 2010) two years ago ([http://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Phoenix_Books&diff=497552443&oldid=389326038 Jun 2010 diffs) was unfortunate. As that Phoenix Books is not related, the Stub should have been overwritten. Also as one of the four listed books was a paperback reissue by Orion-Phoenix rather than a Phoenix Books publication.
- some pages whose interrelation, and whose use in piped links, is troubling: Little, Brown and Company; Little, Brown Book Group; Hachette (publisher)
2. Talk:Phoenix Books#Phoenix this and that
import verbatim
Phoenix (Audio) (Books) --from google 'phoenix audio books'
This list may soon be revised and/or integrated partly with Phoenix Press or Phoenix. -P64 2014-04-13
- [14] [2009?]-09-16 "Phoenix Books, Inc. Announces New Leadership and Editorial"
- [15] 2010-04-26 "Phoenix Books Closes" --evidently it did not close (permanently)
- acq. Offerman late 2007; Viner deceased mid-2009 and company repositioned late 2009
- [16] (c) 2011 Phoenix Books (and Audio) (Inc); imprints Dove Books, Pickwick Press
- ./about About Phoenix Books, Inc: "One of the most formidable companies in audiobook history, Phoenix ..."
above this line certainly related to the Viner enterprise(s)
- [17] VT independent bookstore(s) estab. 2007
- [18] (c) 2013 Phoenix Audio download evidently available now
- original paperback apparently publ 1994(!) ISBN 1-59777-525-8 ppb Phoenix Audio, Jan 1994 (also: ISBN 0-7868-6059-6 hc Hyperion, Sep 1994; ISBN 0-06-222832-3 ppb IT Books, Jun 2013)
--P64 (talk) 18:10, 13 April 2014 (UTC)
end import
- 2010-04 includes "Phoenix Books Inc. ... was abruptly closed Friday" Apr 2010
two more
- 2005-06. The new company planned to release 100 audiobooks and 20 print books during 2005 and 2006. http://variety.com/2005/scene/news/viner-rises-again-with-phoenix-books-1117924779
- 2007-11 The company was called "Phoenix New Millenium" at the time of its 2007 sale by Viner to Dwight D. Opperman, who would reportedly rename it Phoenix Books. http://variety.com/2007/scene/news/opperman-acquires-phoenix-1117976343
http://www.orionbooks.co.uk/Information/About-Orion.page
3. Faye Resnick
- Faye D. Resnick with Mike Walker (1994, October 1). Nicole Brown Simpson: The Private Diary of a Life Interrupted (2nd ed.). Beverly Hills, CA: Dove Books. ISBN 0-7871-0339-X 244pp
- ISBN 155144061X (December 1994); ISBNsearch.org attributes the other to Newstar Press, Oct 1994, hc, first
- [sound recording, abridged]. Dove Audio. ISBN 0-7871-0344-6 3hr
- ISBNsearch Dove Entertainment Inc, Dec 1994, audio
- Faye D. Resnick with Jeanne V. Bell (1996, February). Shattered: In the Eye of the Storm. Dove Books. ISBN 0-7871-0730-1
- ISBNsearch: Newstar Press, Feb 1996, hc
- Faye Resnick at Library of Congress, with 3 library catalog records
- Shattered ..., read by Meredith MacRae, Dove Audio, 1995 http://worldcat.org/oclc/731249045
- Nicole Brown Simpson : details the life and marriage of Nicole and O. J. Simpson, Signet, 1994 ISBN 0451185919 http://worldcat.org/oclc/60261878
- ISBNsearch Signet, Dec 1994, ppb
3b. OJ Simpson jurors
- Madam Foreman: A rush to judgment?, Dove Books ISBN 0-7871-0918-5 237pp -- "Responsibility: Armanda Cooley, Carrie Bess, and Marsha Rubin-Jackson, as told to Tom Byrnes, with Mike Walker." http://worldcat.org/oclc/755067372
- ISBNsearch Newstar Press, Jan 1996, hc, first
- [sound recording, abridged] Dove Audio, 1996 ISBN 0-7871-0917-7 3hr --read by Cooley, Bess, Rubin-Jackson; ed Mike Walker
- ISBNsearch Dove Entertainment Inc, Dec 1995, audio cassette
4. Bill Maher, New Millenium Entertainment
- When You Ride Alone You Ride with bin Laden: What the Government Should Be Telling Us to Help Fight the War on Terrorism, 2003 (ISBN 1-893224-90-2)
- ISBNsearch Phoenix Audio, Sep 2003, "1st Pbk"
book article gives New Millenium, Oct 2002, ISBN 1-59777-513-4 --and NEEDs basic work
- ISBNsearch Phoenix Books, Aug 2005, ppb
5. Phoenix Books (and Audio) --current? http://phoenixbooksandaudio.com/books/detail/bodytransformation/?format=hardcover
(c) 2011; Featured Titles have 2009/2010 dates elsewhere
latest Tweet: 22 Mar 2013 https://twitter.com/phoenixbooksinc
- recent/forthcoming publications at 2010-04 maybe-closing
Shari Arison, Birth (November, 2009)[19] 100,000 copies --her second book Activate your goodness : transforming the world through doing good (Carlsbad, CA: Hay House, 2013)
Linda Gray Sexton, Half in Love: Surviving the Legacy of Suicide (Berkeley: Counterpoint, 2011) [memoir] [20]
James Brown (author), This River (Berkeley: Counterpoint, 2011)
Baseball writers
editSABR#Membership links 13, 10 blue, 3 red
LAP t Bob Davids, founder (deceased) LAP t Bob McConnell, Home Run Log (deceased) Bill Carle, Biographical Committee -- LCCatalog conflates two Larry Lester, Negro Leagues Committee Lyle Spatz, Records Committee W LAP t Bill James, analyst, writer LAP t David Nemec, prolific writer W LAP t Rob Neyer, analyst, journalist LAP t Pete Palmer, analyst, encyclopedist sLAP t David Smith (baseball historian), analyst, Retrosheet founder LAP t John Thorn, historian, encyclopedist sLAP t Robert L. Tiemann, historian sLAP t David W. Vincent, Home Run Log VIAF=284646406 needs merge
W LAP t Henry Chadwick (writer) W .AP t O. P. Caylor LAP t Sam Lacy LAP t Ernest Lanigan LAP t Tim Murnane W LAP t Francis Richter ..P t Wendell Smith W LAP t Alfred H. Spink --LCCat: birthyear 1853 LAP t J. G. Taylor Spink --not in Baseball writers
LAP t Roger Angell sLAP t Bob Carroll (author), football, military history --not in Baseball writers LAP - Carson Cistulli (not tagged) LAP t Peter Gammons sLAP t Gary Gillette LAP t Jerome Holtzman LAP t Roger Kahn David Block (writer) David L. Block; b. Mar. 27, 1944
http://sabr.org/about/henry-chadwick-award Davids, James, Palmer, Lee Allen (baseball) Peter Morris (baseball historian) Peter Morris (writer) Peter R. Morris, b. May 20, 1962 Peter Morris at Library of Congress, with 10 library catalog records w David Neft David S. Lawrence Ritter Lawrence S., Larry w Harold Seymour 2+ fr:Harold Seymour and Dorothy Seymour Mills 0 VIAF=283441312 needs merge That is Mills, DS Mills, DJ VIAF=75950245 106422098 (us, ca) Seymour, DZ VIAF=55386844 104022350 (us, ca) w Jules Tygiel 1+ links here fr:Jules Tygiel
Veterans Committee#Pre-Integration Era Committee members
baseball historians --no cat baseball compiler-researchers --no cat NEED revive categories such as Category:Cincinnati Red Stockings R abbreviation, initialism, acronymedit
whose incoming redirects include Template:R to abbreviated name Template:R to abbreviated title Category:Redirects to initialisms (78/ 57)
My experience suggest to me that the two redirects should not be used and their target should be {R from long name}, ie {Redr|long}. Short targets should not include Wikipeditor abbreviations, a type of neologism. But most short-name source pages (below) may be editorial shortcuts.
incoming redirects include Template:R abbreviation Template:R from abbreviated name Template:R from abbreviated title Category:Redirects from initialisms (11035) + 251 + 121
There are dozens of template redirects from shorter and longer versions of those three template names.[21] For example there are 3, 24, 14, 73 uses of R from ab, abb, abbr, abbrev; 0, 0, 2 uses of R from ii, in, init.
should ask others about detail scope of initialism
{{R to acronym}} (6/ 14) {{R from acronym}} (251/ 248) --inclg many 'ac' redirects .edit
See also User:P64/FSF/Locus all-time polls and much McCaffrey under /FSF.
.edit
I suspect that the other is author of Prejudice and tolerance; Power and powerlessness -- as well as the Mdebe books Talk: British literature (quote paragraph two) Literature in the Celtic languages of the islands is the oldest surviving vernacular literature in Europe. This needs work. First, the linked article gives no sources, neither References nor External links (tagged in 2006; little changed since 2007 coverage of the Phillippines). It explains vernacular as the speech of the common people and asserts, "In the European tradition, this effectively means literature not written in Latin." --without any explanation why or any statement that "the European tradition" means Europe as a post-classical culture rather than a territory. --or whatever reason we have for excluding earlier Mediterranean civilizations where ancient languages were vernacular (pardon the expression). Lacking a valuable target article, the meaning of the term needs explanation here or (probably better) this article should say what it means without a technical term. CATEGORY SPACING If I understand correctly this editor has recently revised 3000 articles partly/wholly to tweak spaces in the category section.[22]
Template talk: WikiProject United States/doc in progress 2013-01-25
note that USA has explicitly US-related wikiprojects such as WP:WikiProject Asian Americans and WP:US Government in addition to subsidiaries such as state and city projects. Regarding subsidiary projects --that is, US-related projects that are supported by the single WP US template-- one relevant question is which biographies of "People from Ohio" (or another state) should be assigned to the state wikiproject, such as Talk: Home Run Johnson. Which other articles such as Talk:Cincinnati Reds should be tagged? Which people and institution articles should be tagged WP US if
15 "a wonderful place" "it became boring" 17 "absolutely loved" first school with "open plan" 17 village school "pretty Dickensian--a complete contrast" 18 "I quite liked secondary school" 23 "I was very lucky in having such good friends" espy in teens 24 Elizabeth Goudge 27 Jessica Mitford
This workspace has contributed to User:P64/Technical. 2013-10-23
British Counciledit{{British council }}; de:Vorlage:British council {{Contemporary writers}} --Melvin Burgess Penelope Lively A. S. Byatt 2013-09-12, all of my biographies ;-) but genre Children or Young adult hits many many more de:Benutzer/P64de/Perlentaucher d od-bi Brian Aldiss d David Almond - Rachel Anderson d Malorie Blackman d Quentin Blake d od-bi Tim Bowler d od-bi Theresa Breslin -Raymond Briggs d Anthony Browne d Melvin Burgess d John Burningham d Aidan Chambers d Lauren Child -Gillian Clarke d Eoin Colfer d Frank Cottrell Boyce d od-bi Gillian Cross d Kevin Crossley-Holland d -d-b- Anita Desai d od-b- Berlie Doherty d Anne Fine -Michael Foreman d odpbi Neil Gaiman -Jane Gardam -Jamila Gavin d.Mark Haddon dSonya Hartnett dElizabeth Laird (author) d.Geraldine McCaughrean d.Hilary McKay d Michael Morpurgo d od-bi Patrick Ness d odpb- Beverley Naidoo -Michelle Paver d.Mal Peet d od-bi Terry Pratchett -Alison Prince d odpbi Philip Pullman dPhilip Reeve d Michael Rosen d odpb- Meg Rosoff d -dpbi Tony Ross d.J. K. Rowling d od-biKate Thompson d Jacqueline Wilson -Simon Winchester Perl: Gaiman, Naidoo, Nesbit, Pullman
PersondataeditTir na n-Og Award - TnO coverage commonly missing or inadequate
Elleman[1] Category:Persondata templates without short description parameter
Category:Newbery Medal winners Done (main not in cat)
Category:Newbery Medal winning works Done (main not in cat) Co-authors are eligible to win but that has not happened --indeed, runners-up only in 1931, 1952 Newbery Honor also Done prefaces (main not in cat) Category:Newbery Honor winners Done (main not in cat)
Category:Caldecott Medal winning works Done (main is *) Co-illustrators are eligible to win and five have done so --most recently Alice and Martin Provensen in 1984
Category:Michael L. Printz Award winning works Done (main not in cat)
Category:Carnegie Medal in Literature winners Done (main not in cat)
Carnegie Medal in Literature winners Peter Dickinson Carnegie Medal in Literature winners Rosemary Harris (writer)
Category:Kate Greenaway Medal winning works Done (main not in cat)
Category:Guardian Children's Fiction Prize winning works Done (main not in cat)
Category:Hans Christian Andersen Award for Illustration winners Done preface
Category:Hans Christian Andersen Award for Writing winners Done preface
Category:Astrid Lindgren Memorial Award winners Done preface
Awardsedit
Sarah Abbott (Where I begin, 1970; The old dog, 1972);
rev newly ill 1995 http://lccn.loc.gov/93041081 Charlotte Bookman (The city boy and the country horse, 1952)) http://lccn.loc.gov/53020871
River Winding
Bunny
Some Things Go Together (1972, ... 1999)
The Beautiful Christmas Tree editions Ruth Robbins Yan Nascimbene
Talk:Phoenix Award#Phoenix updates s- oOLAP Graham Salisbury O=poets 230 oLAP Gary Soto i34054 one novel, two short
-- obLAP Sara Fanelli 0 i60291 few --next year's Phoenix PBA in section 1 -- o LAP Charlotte Zolotow 0 --no Phoenix -2 LAP Kady MacDonald Denton 0 --Phoenix PB r-u in section 2 s2 LAP Ursula Nordstrom 0 s- LAP Peggy Rathmann 1 de:Peggy Rathmann --Phoenix PBA hastily in lead section s2 oiLAP Paul O. Zelinsky 0 --Phoenix PBA hastily in lead section; much work on list of Books -2 o LAP Anne Isaacs 0 i167631 --Phoenix PBA hastily in lead section; much work on list of Works s2 b AP Raymond Briggs 10 --no Phoenix s- o LAP Denise Fleming 0 --Phoenix basics in Stub s2 oLAP Kevin Henkes 1 --Phoenix basics in section 1, annotated listing
May 2014edit2015 TirnaNog
June 2014editBG Horn Book; CILIP 2013, 2014
4 Feb 2014 inaugural longlists (20 each) http://www.carnegiegreenaway.org.uk/pressdesk/press.php?release=pres_2014_long_announce.html
INAUGURAL LONGLISTS FOR PRESTIGIOUS CILIP CARNEGIE AND KATE GREENAWAY MEDALS ANNOUNCED] 4 February 2014 5 Nov 2013 nominations http://www.carnegiegreenaway.org.uk/pressdesk/press.php?release=pres_2014_nom_announce.html
76 + 61 nominations (at least one by a CILIP member), biggest yet Judges will select longlists, new
Table: annual cycles, progressedit
Schoolchildren's choice awardsedit/Schoolchildren's choice awards 2014-04-30
Astrid Lindgren Memorial Award 2016edit2015-10-15 (Frankfurt Book Fair) "Nominees announced for 2016 Astrid Lindgren Memorial Award" [23] -- 215 candidates from 59 countries, 111 nominating bodies 2016-01-12 The Astrid Lindgren Memorial Award 2016 to be announced on April 5th [24] 2016-01-25 nominations open for 2017 2016-04-05 (Stockholm and Bologna)
HC Andersen Awardsedit[IBBY somewhere says "Nobel Prize for Children's Literature".] USBBY says "Little Nobel Prize" and considers it the highest recognition http://www.usbby.org/list_hca.html
Winners 1956-2012 with some acceptance speeches from 1996 (4 wri, 4 ill)
Bauer 2010?
--with shortbiographies of all (IBBY: Roger Mello) --but no index? See also User:P64/FSF/Children's/VIAF#English-speaking nominees.
March 2016editAndersen shortlists (and winners)
--with shortbiographies of all (IBBY: Roger Mello) --but no index? See also User:P64/FSF/Children's/VIAF#English-speaking nominees. ANDERSEN finalists 2002 to 2016
28 and 29 nominees from 34 countries, 2015-03-30 10 jurors led by Jury President Patricia Aldana (Toronto, Canada)
The two winners will be announced at the IBBY Press Conference on 4 April 2016 at the Bologna International Children’s Book Fair. The medals and diplomas will be presented to the winners during the 35th IBBY Congress in Auckland, New Zealand on Saturday, 20 August 2016. Authors
Illustrators
+ nominee Canada: Pierre Pratt -- D:Q3386681 French-Canadian, fr
2016-03-02 add ISFDB
The following nominees have been submitted for the 2016 Hans Christian Andersen Awards by the National Sections of IBBY. For the 2016 Awards 28 authors and 29 illustrators have been nominated from 34 countries. Argentina: author María Laura Devetach; illustrator Diego Bianki Australia; author Ursula Dubosarsky; illustrator Bronwyn Bancroft Austria: author Renate Welsh; illustrator Linda Wolfsgruber Belgium: author Bart Moeyaert; illustrator Rascal Brazil: author Marina Colasanti; illustrator Ciça Fittipaldi Canada: author Kenneth Oppel; illustrator Pierre Pratt China: author Cao Wenxuan; illustrator Zhu Chengliang Colombia: illustrator Claudia Rueda Croatia: author Miro Gavran Denmark: author Louis Jensen; illustrator Lilian Brøgger Egypt: author Affaf Tobbala Estonia: author Piret Raud France: author Timothée de Fombelle ISFDB LCCN; illustrator François Place fr:François Place (écrivain)
Germany: author Mirjam Pressler; illustrator Rotraut Susanne Berner Greece: author Eleni Dikaiou; illustrator Lida Varvarousi Iran: illustrator Pejman Rahimizadeh Italy: author Chiara Carminati; illustrator Alessandro Sanna Japan: author Eiko Kadono; illustrator Ken Katayama Republic of Korea: illustrator Suzy Lee Latvia: illustrator Anita Paegle Mexico: illustrator Gabriel Pacheco Netherlands: author Ted van Lieshout; illustrator Marit Törnqvist New Zealand: author Joy Cowley Norway: author Tor Åge Bringsværd; illustrator Lisa Aisato Palestine: author Sonia Nimr Russia: author Andrey Usachev; illustrator Mikhail Fedorov Slovakia: author Daniel Hevier; illustrator Peter Uchnár Slovenia: author Svetlana Makarovič; illustrator Marjan Manček Spain: author Agustín Fernández Paz; illustrator Miguelanxo Prado Sweden: illustrator Eva Lindström Switzerland: author Franz Hohler; illustrator Etienne Delessert Turkey: author Gülçin Alpöge; illustrator Ferit Avci UK: author Elizabeth Laird; illustrator Chris Riddell USA: author Lois Lowry; illustrator Chris Raschka
""Candidates for the Hans Christian Andersen Awards 1956–2002"
See also User:P64/FSF/Children's/VIAF#Hans Christian Andersen Award (complete winning Writers and Illustrators) and especially User:P64/FSF/Children's/VIAF#English-speaking nominees (complete). CCSUedit"Hans Christian Andersen Award". Curriculum Lab. Elihu Burritt Library. Central Connecticut State University (CCSU). 2007. Retrieved 2014-03-24.</ref> Quote: The Hans Christian Anderson Award is the most distinguished prize in children's literature and is often referred to as the "Little Nobel Prize." The award is given to an author and an illustrator, living at the time of the nomination, whose complete works have made a lasting contribution to children's literature. Runners-up to 2002edit
Writers 1966-2000edit"Highly Commended" to 1996; "Finalist" from 1998 -p d-N 2000 Ulf Stark 7 Sweden s oi AP odpiN 2000 Peter Dickinson 5 United Kingdom s oiLAP odpiN 2000 Lois Lowry 15 USA above) —— 2008 1998 Brian Doyle (writer) 0 Canada -p d-N 1998 Ruskin Bond 9 India Ap —— 1998 Alice Vieira 5 Portugal s obiAP odpbiN 1998 Anne Fine 7 United Kingdom AP d-N 1994c 1992i María Elena Walsh 12 Argentina above)—— —— 2014 1992 Houshang Moradi Kermani 4 Iran above) dpN 2004 2002 1990 Bjarne Reuter 6 Denmark -ap —— 1988i Claude Roy (poet) 3 France fr:Claude Roy (écrivain) s iAP d-N 1986 1984i Patricia Wrightson 8 Australia —— —— 1980 Harry Kullmann Sweden naive WD search (1919-1982) {{LCAuth| ... d-N 1982 1980 Lygia Bojunga Nunes 11 Brazil s i AP ud-N 1978 Alan Garner 9 United Kingdom ap —— 1976 Agniya Barto 9 CCSU: Agnija USSR s AP d-N 1976 1974 Cecil Bodker 10 Denmark s oi AP d-N 1974 Rosemary Sutcliff 13 United Kingdom AP d-N 1972 Sergei Mikhalkov many USSR o Ap d-N 1972 Otfried Preussler many West Germany —— —— 1974 1972 Colette Vivier 1 France fr:Colette Vivier 1898-1979 (noDE)GNDName=107642824; VIAF=301381439 pl {{LCAuth| s AP --N 1972 Maria Gripe 16 Sweden -p d-N 1972 1970 Ana María Matute 15 Spain -p —— 1970 Ela Peroci 2 Yugoslavia (Slovene) LAP d-iN 1976 1970 E. B. White 18+ USA s LAP --N 1968 Elizabeth Coatsworth 2 USA -p d-N 1966 Karl Bruckner 7 Austria AP d-N 1970 1968 1966 Gianni Rodari many Italy s AP —— 1968 1966 Jose Maria Sanchez-Silva 8 Spain
Illustrators 1966-2000edit"Highly Commended" to 1996; "Finalist" from 1998 above) dpN 2014 2004 2002 2000 Rotraut Susanne Berner Germany —— —— 2000 Boris Diodorov 1 Russia ru:Диодоров, Борис Аркадьевич 1934- (noDE) VIAF=185441721 cz {{LCAuth| -p —— 2000 Marija Lucija Stupica Slovenia —— d-N 1998 Binette Schroeder 1 Germany de:Binette Schroeder 1939- o AP d-N 1998 Dick Bruna 10 Netherlands AP o-N 1998 Stasys Eidrigevičius 7 Poland (Lithuania) -p —— 1988 Yasuo Segawa 1 Japan (dmy) above)LAP d-N 2008 1986i Adolf Born 7 Czechoslovakia s b AP —— 1984i Raymond Briggs 9+ United Kingdom s d-p odpN 1984i Helme Heine 2 Germany IBBY only above) od-N 2010 2006 1980 Étienne Delessert Switzerland s oLAP doN 1998 1980 Tomi Ungerer 12 France LAP —— 1978 Leo and Diane Dillon 1 USA joint : Leo Dillon; Diane Dillon Ap --N 1976 Ľudovít Fulla 6 Czechoslovakia (Slovak) —— —— 1976 Svend Otto S. 4 Denmark da:Svend Otto S. (noDE) {{LCAuth| —— —— 1974 Helga Aichinger Austria (noDE) naive WikiData search (1937-) {{LCAuth| —— —— 1974 Nicole Claveloux 1 France fr:Nicole Claveloux 1940- {{LCAuth| s AP —— 1974 Charles Keeping 2 United Kingdom ap d-N 1972 Felix Hoffmann (illustrator) 3 Switzerland —— —— 1972 Petros Zambellis Greece naive WD search {{subst:Authority control/sandbox|VIAF= not found {{LCAuth| oap —— 1972 Adolf Zábranský 4 Ōta, Daihachi, 1918- (Ohta) at Library of Congress, with 14 library catalog records (11 "from old catalog") dAP --N 1968 Roger Duvoisin 2 USA s AP —— 1972 1970 1968 Ib Spang Olsen 4 Denmark s AP d-N 1968 1966 Jiří Trnka 17
CCSU Writers 1960 to 1964edit1960 - 1964: CCSU lists 31 runners-up; IBBY lists 14 nominees 1962-1964 -- ALL DISTINCT !
1964 René Guillot 8 France Georgiou Geralis - el? ILLIADA Tomiko Inui - ja:Tomiko Inui? HOKKYOKU NO MUSHIKA MISHIKA Carmen Kurtz 3 OSCAR, COSMONAUTA Madeleine L'Engle 14+ A WRINKLE IN TIME (YP L566wr) Gunnel Linde 5 TILLS AVENTYR I SKORTENSGRAND Mira Lobe 6 HANNES UND SEIN BUMPAN Jean Ollivier fr:Jean Ollivier2 (noDE) LES SALTIMBANQUES Oili Tanninen de:Oili Tanninen2 MURU MENEE KALAAN Thomas Zacharias (writer) & Wanda Zacharias de:Wanda Zacharias1 illus. MIKOSCH DAS KARUSSELPFERD
1962 Meindert DeJong 8 USA Gerhart Ellert de:Gerhart Ellert1 AUF ENDLOSEN STRASSEN Jean Craighead George 3 MY SIDE OF THE MOUNTAIN (J G348my) Adolf Haller de:Adolf Haller1 DER PAGE ORTEGUILL Frank Newfeld 0 PRINCESS OF TOMSOBO Merja Otava - PRISKA KESASTA KESAAN Renee Reggiani - LE AVVENTURE DI CINQUE RAGAZZI E UN CANE Erkki Rekimies fi:Erkki Rekimies1 TAPPORAHAT Ruth Robbins - Baboushka and the Three Kings (JPB Robbins)--Caldecott Nicolas Sidjakov Gerda Marie Scheidl noDE DAS MONDGESICHT John Verney (illustrator) - obit FRIDAY'S TUNNEL
1960 Erich Kästner many Germany ALS ICH EIN KLEIHER JUNGE WAR (PT 2621 A23 Z46) Giana Anguissola it:Giana Anguissola1 PRISCILLA Odd Brocyman ? MARIANNE PO SYKEHUS Karl Bruckner LALE, DIE TURKIN Heinrich-Maria Denneborg de:Heinrich Maria Denneborg1 JAN UND DAS WILDPFERD (J D398j) Eflatun Cem Guney tr:Eflatun Cem Güney1 DEDE KORKUS MASALLARI Dede Korkut Masalları Karel Jeuninckx & Lo Vermeulen noDE MANKO KAPAK Naomi Mitchison 6 JUDY AND LAKSHMI Aila Nissinen noDE MINA OLEN LAMMENPEI Karl Rune Nordkvist noDE MANUEL ZIGENARPOJKEN Themos Potaaianos Themos Potamianos ? ALONG THE SEASIDE Annie M. G. Schmidt 16 WIPLALA Mosche ALL TOGETHER Covering the shortlistseditShortlist appearances done
Schubiger 2004 2008
Almond 2008 2010
hr = "the highest recognition available to creators of children's books" For his lasting contribution as a children's illustrator, Burningham was one of five or six finalists in 2012 and in 2014 for the biennial, international Hans Christian Andersen Award, the highest recognition available to creators of children's books 2002 2004 top pages incorporate winners press release 2006 2008 with dated winners press release 2010 2012 2014 with dated shortlist press release main archive reportedly includes Bookbird special issues 1994 to 2010[35] (2004 confirmed) DE.wikieditWaddell add The Park in the Dark (Walker, 1989) Maschler Award 1990 "Im Jahr 1990 erhielt Haugen den renommierten Hans-Christian-Andersen-Preis für Die Nachtvögel" --CHECK THAT --needs Die Chroniken von Narnia Zwerger listing --needs EN cat Category:Illustrators of fairy tales 1992 mention/listing 1994 listings 1996 mention/listing 1998 mention/listing 2000 mention/listing 2002 mentions/listings 2002 erhielt er den Hans Christian Andersen-Preis für seine Kinderbuch-Illustrationen 2004 listings 2006 listings !Erlbruch 2008 Shubiger speech as ref(?), ref needs expansion; Innocenti listing 2010 Almond prose mentions and listing; Bauer 2012 listing & Ext link speech Sis (same as Bauer) Awardsedit
template {{WikiProject Awards}} Template talk:American Library Association
old LCCatalog http://catalog.loc.gov/ ISBN converter http://www.isbn.org/converterpub.asp (backup http://pcn.loc.gov/isbncnvt.html) [ref name=SFawards-dwjones] "Diana Wynne Jones". The Locus Index to SF Awards: Index to Literary Nominees. Locus Publications. Retrieved 2012-04-27. (Gale) Dictionary of Literary Biography —available at Harvard? David C. Browning (Hrsg.): Everyman's Dictionary of literary biography. English & American. Dent, London 1958 (Everyman's library; 499).
Astrid Lindgren Memorial Award CCSU says the HCA award recognized particular works for a time --and lists particular works for the 1956/58/60 winners and 60/62/64 runners up
Runner Up, 1956 to 1964
Highly Commended, 1966 to 1996(?)
Finalist, 1998 to ?
Carnegie Medal in Literature +eponcat Guardian Children's Fiction Prize +eponcat
Kate Greenaway Medal +eponcat LEWIS CARROLL - Lewis Carroll Shelf Award PHOENIX - Phoenix Award MASCHLER - Kurt Maschler Award SMARTIES It was also bronze runner up for the Nestlé Smarties Book Prize in age category 6–8 years.[11] ALA
PZ7.T3715965 Ne 2007 [14] needs-infobox-cover=1st
Francis Spufford picks the best kids' books of all time Share 0 Email Francis Spufford The Guardian, Thursday 29 November 2001
BOSTON GLOBE HORN BOOK AWARD
LINDGREN
(SENDAK) received one of two inaugural Astrid Lindgren Memorial Awards in 2003, recognizing his career contribution to "children's and young adult literature in the broadest sense". The citation called him "the modern picture-book's portal figure" and the presentation credited Where the Wild Things Are with "all at once [revolutionizing] the entire picture-book narrative ... thematically, aesthetically, and psychologically."[17] In 2005 PULLMAN won the biggest prize in children's literature, the Astrid Lindgren Memorial Award from the Swedish Arts Council, recognising his career contribution to "children's and young adult literature in the broadest sense". According to the presentation, "Pullman radically injects new life into fantasy by introducing a variety of alternative worlds and by allowing good and evil to become ambiguous." In every genre, "he combines storytelling and psychological insight of the highest order."[11]
more ALA adult books awardseditSophie Brody Award (2006) for excellence in Jewish literature meaning "fiction, nonfiction, or poetry that has as its central purpose the exploration of the Jewish experience."[36] Andrew Carnegie Medals for Excellence in Fiction and Nonfiction. Template talk:American Library Association
ALA children's books awardsedit
Press releases from the ALA (archive?) Young Adult Library Services Association, a division of the American Library Association ALSC The Newbery [18]
Web Extra at ALA Editions --with "distinctive essays"
ASLC (2012). The Newbery & Caldecott Awards: A Guide to the Medal and Honor Books. 0838936016, 9780838936016 all editions include 1991–2013 except 2009 (and 2009 is available too, see above); 2013 expected June 1
Manual
IDENTICAL MANUALS? perhaps except for running footers, the foreword on Caldecott/Newbery p2, the Reading List p24-25, and extra examples p67–68 2 Foreword (on Newbery / Caldecott) 3 Contents 5 Notes 6 Part I
18 Part II 40 Part III 47 Part IV 64 Appendix: Expanded Definitions & Examples
CaldecotteditManual
ALSC celebrates the 75th anniversary in 2013 with various events and an online scrapbook, "75 Years of the Caldecott Medal".[19][19] http://www.ala.org/alsc/sites/ala.org.alsc/files/content/caldecott_manual_9Oct2009.pdf Randolph Caldecott Medal Committee Manual. June 2009; formatted August 2012. Retrieved 3 May 2013. page 9 - Bylaws as revised May 2009
pages 10-11 Terms and Criteria quoted online page 19
pages 21-22
the artist of the most distinguished American picture book for children
The artist must be a US citizen or resident and the illustrations must be original to the book, which must be published first or simultaneously in the US in English during the preceding year.
A picture book provides "a visual experience. A picture book has a collective unity of story-line, theme, or concept, developed through the series of pictures" that constitute the book. Picture books intended for any audience up to age 14 should be considered.
"for distinguished illustrations in a picture book and for excellence of pictorial presentation for children". The book must be self-contained, independent of other media for its enjoyment. Components other than illustration should be considered as they bear on effectiveness as a children's picture book. Newbery (and Caldecott?)editMelcher moved to New York in 1918 as co-editor of Publisher's Weekly (R. R. Bowker). He was then secretary of the national association. and the job made him a liaison between publishers, booksellers, and librarians. He co-founded Children's Book Week, an annual affair of those three groups beginning 1919. His first American Library Association annual conference was in June 1921, as the publisher representative on a Children's Book Week panel that met on the first day. Afterward he conceived the annual award for children's literature as ... and asked to make an unscheduled reappearance on the program for the Children's Section during the next day's session. The goals were to foster production of high quality American children's books and to grow the ALA Children's Section. --attract children's librarians to join the section (pay dues) and attend the annual ALA conference. Melcher guessed in writing to the ALA section chair fall 1921 that only about half a dozen books would be considered. --something to be changed The token should show "genius in the service of children
Aurianne Awardedit
{WP Children's lit} IMPORTANCE62 pages are currently rated High-importance by WP Children's literature. Here is a complete distribution of their numbers by "class", in descending order by quality with other classes at the end. Selected subtotals given at the left margin. For example, the number of B-class articles is 12 and the number in classes B and above is 21. "Young Adult Literature (YA Lit)" is a redirect to "Young-adult fiction"; both are rated Start/Top. There may be other redirects duplication in these lists.
21
35
54
58
62 Why are several articles named? Judging quickly and usually by article names alone, which is errorprone, I have selected every article that is not about a particular book, series, or periodical, nor about a particular author, nor about a fictional universe, character, etc.
What's remarkable about this report? First, the articles on children's literature history, types, organizations, awards, and so on, are rather poorly developed in contrast to the articles on particular authors &c, books &c, characters &c. Only two of 21 articles graded B and above are about the field or industry rather than the particulars that have fans. Only 4 of 35 graded C and above. But 12 of 23 starts and stubs. Even for those articles we recognize to be Top-importance, this shows, either we don't work much on these field articles or they are much more difficult to produce. Second, those 16 "field" articles that we label Top-importance are a quirky selection. For awards we have Carnegie, Caldecott, and Batchelder (plus Newbery mis-classified as a List). Skimming the 321 High-importance article names, I find only the Blue Peter Book Award. Somehow Mildred Batchelder and Blue Peter (awards) have attained heights unknown to their peers. The list of 321 High-importance articles shows the same two remarkable characteristics but far more extremely. Only 14 of those articles are about the field (including particular awards, organizations, publishers) rather than a particular author, book, character, etc. 20% of all but none of the 14 field articles is graded B or better; 40% of all but only 1 of the 14 field articles (Anthropomorphism) is graded C or better. One particular award is rated High-importance, Blue Peter Book Award. One organization, CILIP. One role, Children's Laureate. Those three are British. One publisher, Random House. One imprint, Beginner Books of Random House. Those are American. The nine others are: Anthropomorphism (C); Gay male teen fiction, Hornbook, Penny dreadful, Young-adult-fiction awards (Start); Children's non-fiction literature, Cumulative tale, Homosexuality in children's literature, Latino children's literature (Stub) Picture book is unassessed; I tagged it only this week. Toy book is doubly under-rated Start/Low. Pop-up book (movable book) is rated Start/Mid. Alphabet book is Start/High. School story is C/Mid. Juvenile series is a Category: Juvenile series without a main article. Book series is not tagged by any wikiproject. Comic book is tagged only by Magazines and Comics. Graphic novel is tagged only by Comics. Comics is tagged by Comics, Comedy, and Visual Arts. Fable is tagged only by Novels(!?). (Categories are not tagged by this project, or not graded.) High-importance to Children's literature
82
127
264
317
321 |
- ^ Barbara Elleman. "The John Newbery Medal: The First Decade". The Newbery and Caldecott Awards: A Guide to the Medal and Honor Books. ALSC. ALA. 17th annual edition, 2007, pp. 9-16. This is one "distinctive essay" from past editions reprinted by ALA at "Web Extra: Newbery and Caldecott Awards". Retrieved 2013-05-17.
- ^ "2002". Hans Christian Andersen Awards. International Board on Books for Young People (IBBY). Press release with other contemporary material. Retrieved 2014-03-23.
- ^ "2004". Hans Christian Andersen Awards. International Board on Books for Young People (IBBY). Press release with other contemporary material. Retrieved 2014-03-23.
- ^ "2006". Hans Christian Andersen Awards. International Board on Books for Young People (IBBY). With contemporary material including the 27 March 2006 press release. Retrieved 2014-03-23.
- ^ "2008". Hans Christian Andersen Awards. International Board on Books for Young People (IBBY). With contemporary material including the 31 March 2008 press release. Retrieved 2014-03-23.
- ^ "2010". Hans Christian Andersen Awards. International Board on Books for Young People (IBBY). With contemporary material including the 2010 shortlist press release. Retrieved 2014-03-23.
- ^ "2012 Awards". Hans Christian Andersen Awards. IBBY. With contemporary material including the 6 March 2012 shortlist press release. Retrieved 2014-03-23.
- ^ "2014 Awards". Hans Christian Andersen Awards. IBBY. With contemporary material including the 17 March 2014 shortlist press release. Retrieved 2014-03-23.
- ^ "Hans Christian Andersen Award". 2007(?). Curriculum Lab. Elihu Burritt Library. Central Connecticut State University (CCSU). Retrieved ...
- ^ "Kurt Maschler Awards". Book Awards. bizland.com. Retrieved 2008-06-26.
- ^ Nestlé Children's Book Prize 2007. Booktrust. Updated 2012-10-19.
- ^ "Michael L. Printz Winners and Honor Books". Young Adult Library Services Association. ALA. Retrieved 2012-09-05.
- ^ {{isfdb ... (ISFDB). Retrieved 2012-08-01. Select a title to see its linked publication history and general information. Select a particular edition (title) for more data at that level, such as a front cover image or linked contents.
- ^ "The new policeman" (first U.S. edition). Library of Congress Catalog Record. Retrieved 2012-08-01.
- ^
(directory, 2007 CILIP Awards press releases). CILIP. Retrieved 2012-07-20.
• Two press releases 21 June 2007 pertain to Grey and The Adventures. Two earlier releases 20 April 2007 may be valuable, "Shortlist ... announced" and "... Judges Comments on the Shortlist". - ^ "Boston Globe–Horn Book Awards Winners and Honor Books 1967 to present". The Horn Book. Retrieved 16 April 2012.
- ^ "2003: Maurice Sendak". (ALMA presentation English). The Astrid Lindgren Memorial Award. Page 1. Retrieved August 9, 2012.
- ^
ALSC (2007). The Newbery and Caldecott Awards: A Guide to the Medal and Honor Books. ALA.
See also the 2012 edition [Web Extra at ALA Editions: evidently an archive of "distinctive essays" from previous editions. }} - ^ a b "The Caldecott Medal 75th Anniversary". ALSC, ALA. Retrieved 3 May 2013.
- ^ "Aurianne Award (HISTORICAL): Winner List – All Years". ALA. Retrieved 6 May 2013.