2023 Newbery winner (I know, you thought I was done with them!), Freewater by Amina Luqman-Dawson is a tale about Homer and Ada, two enslaved children running away from a plantation to a secret swamp maroon community called Freewater. Told from various points of view, Freewater follows many characters traveling to and from the maroon community…
Category: Newbery Book Reviews
First Newbery Read-Alouds: 24 Books for Younger Children
The Newbery Award has been given each year since 1922 for “The Most Distinguished Contribution to American Literature for Children.” But “children” is a pretty large category: what a 3 year old might love is not the same as what a 13 year old might. As a general rule, most Newberies are good reads for…
After Reading All 101 Newbery Award Winning Books, Here Are My Favorites
After spending over 8 years reading the 101 Newbery award winning books, I have some favorites. I love a good book list, so that was my original plan for this post: list my favorite 42 Newberies. But as I was telling my husband Evan about this, he said he wanted to know what I thought…
Newbery Review #101 (The Last Cuentista, Higuera, 2022)
2022 Newbery winner, The Last Cuentista, by Donna Barba Higuera. Petra Peña wants to become a storyteller like her Abuelita, but instead she is leaving her beloved Lita (what she calls her grandmother). Together with her little brother Javier and her scientist parents, Petra is among some of the few people to escape the destruction…
Books I’m Actually Recommending From the First 100 Newberies
We’ve made it folks! I’ve read through 100 Newberies, reviewed over eight years! This is the last set of quick recommendations and ratings for Newberies 76 through 100. (If you’d like to see the first three sets here is # 1-25, 26-50, and 51-75. For links to each individual review you can go here.) This last…
Newbery Review #99 (New Kid, Craft, 2020)
2020 Newbery winner, New Kid by Jerry Craft, is a graphic novel that follows 7th grader Jordan Banks to his new private school. He’s not thrilled about being there: he’d rather be at an art school, and he’d rather not be one of the only scholarship kids, and he’d rather not be one of the only…
Newbery Review #98 (Merci Suárez Changes Gears, Medina, 2019)
2019 Newbery winner, Merci Suárez Changes Gears by Meg Medina follows Merci’s sixth grade year as a scholarship student at a fancy prep school while her grandfather’s neurological health deteriorates. Merci wants everything to stay the same, but middle school is not the same as grade school, with popular girl Edna driving her crazy and…
Newbery Review #97 (Hello, Universe, Kelly, 2018)
2018 Newbery winner, Hello, Universe by Erin Entrada Kelly weaves five children’s (and a guinea pig’s) stories together, mainly over the course of one day of missed connections, serendipitous meetings, and a little mystery sleuthing to rescue Virgil Salinas and his guinea pig Gulliver from the bottom of an abandoned dry-well. What was interesting: In…
Newbery Review #96 (The Girl Who Drank the Moon, Barnhill, 2017)
2017 Newbery winner, The Girl Who Drank the Moon by Kelly Barnhill is a high fantasy novel about the last baby, Luna, that good witch Xan saves from being abandoned in the forest. But Xan accidently “enmagics” the baby, letting Luna drink not a tiny bit of starlight, but a whole lot of moonlight. This magic…
Newbery Review #95 (Last Stop on Market Street, de la Peña, 2016)
2016 Newbery winner, Last Stop on Market Street by Matt de la Peña and illustrated by Christian Robinson is a beautiful picture book about CJ and his grandmother’s trip on the bus to serve at a soup kitchen. CJ is not thrilled about the rain, or having to take the bus, or not having headphones…
Newbery Review #94 (The Crossover, The Alexander, 2015)
2015 Newbery winner, The Crossover by Kwame Alexander, is a free verse novel about two African American middle-school, basketball-loving, twin brothers. They are sons of a semi-pro player who had a career in Italy, (Evan tells me this is reminiscent of Kobe Bryant who grew up partially in Italy when his father played there), but his…
Newbery Review #93(Flora & Ulysses, DiCamillo, 2014)
2014 Newbery winner, Flora & Ulysses: The Illuminated Adventures by Kate DiCamillo is the tale of the girl, Flora, who loves her comics, and her divorced father who gave them to her. She also finds herself with her own superhero squirrel who she saved from death-by-vacuum and gained superpowers in the process. Ulysses, the squirrel,…
Newbery Review #92 (The One and Only Ivan, Applegate, 2013)
2013 Newbery winner, The One and Only Ivan by Katherine Applegate is a book about a gorilla named Ivan who is living in small cage in a mall next to an old elephant named Stella and a tiny mangy stray dog named Bob. When the mall’s owner buys a new baby elephant, Ruby, to help the…
Newbery Review #91 (Dead End in Norvelt, Gantos, 2012)
The 2012 Newbery winner is Dead End in Norvelt by Jack Gantos. In a funny, fictional autobiography, Jack Gantos’s mid 1960s summer is ruined when he accidently shoots off his father’s Japanese sniper rifle. His only reprieve from two months of being grounded is to help his elderly neighbor Ms. Volkner write obituaries for the…
Newbery Review #90 (Moon Over Manifest, Vanderpool, 2011)
Moon Over Manifest by Clare Vanderpool is a tale set around the fictional (but inspired by a real) town of Manifest, Kansas. Told half in the summer of Depression Era 1936 and half in the end of World War I 1918 and 1919, Abilene Tucker is a young girl dropped off for the summer of…