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Ruth and Sylvia Schwartz Children’s Book Awards 2009 Winners Announced


Toronto, May 20, 2009 – The students at Market Lane Junior and Senior Public School today announced the winners of the Ruth and Sylvia Schwartz Children’s Book Awards:

Children’s picture book
award category

Young adult/middle
reader  award category

Chester's Back!
By Mélanie Watt  (Montreal, QC)
Kids Can Press

 

Libertad
By Alma Fullerton (Midland, ON)
Published in Canada by Fitzhenry & Whiteside

 

 


FACTS
  • This is Mélanie Watt’s second win, she previously won for Scaredy Squirrel in 2007; it is Alma Fullerton’s first.

  • The two awards, of $6,000 each, recognize artistic excellence in writing and illustration in Canadian children’s literature.

  • The winners were selected by two juries of young readers at Market Lane Junior and Senior Public School. Seven students in grades 3 and 4 chose the author/illustrator of the children’s picture book award, while five students in grades 7 and 8 selected the recipient of the young adult/middle reader award.

  • Approximately 120 students participated in this year’s event and book clubs were established in each of the classes.

  • The announcement took place at Market Lane Junior and Senior Public School, 246 The Esplanade, at 1 p.m. on May 20, 2009.


QUOTES

Student jurors in grades 3 and 4 commented on Mélanie Watt’s picture book Chester’s Back!:
    “It could be a funny, short play. I liked the pictures.”
    “It is a very original book.”
    “Very funny – I like it because of Chester’s imagination.”

Student jurors in grades 7 and 8
said the following about Alma Fullerton’s Libertad: 
    “I was sad when it was over. I read it twice.”
    “I loved the way it was written in poem [verse]. It’s not a happy book but realistic and believable. I really connected to the    
    characters and wanted to know what happened to them.”
    “It had mature themes that brought you into the book.”

LEARN MORE

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The Ontario Arts Foundation (OAF) offers donors effective and creative opportunities for charitable giving – helping to build a foundation for the arts in Ontario. OAF works with donors to build lasting endowments in support of the arts – a gift for this generation and the next.

The Ontario Arts Council (OAC) is the province of Ontario’s primary funding body for professional arts activity. Since 1963, the OAC has played a vital role in promoting and assisting the development of the arts and artists for the enjoyment and benefit of Ontarians.

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