2008 Edgar Award Nominees

The 2008 Edgar Award Nominees have been announced.  The Mystery Writes of America give the award in several categories including juvenile and YA.  The nominees are:

Best Juvenile

The Name of This Book Is Secret by Pseudonymous Bosch.
Shadows on Society Hill by Evelyn Coleman
Deep and Dark and Dangerous by Mary Downing Hahn
The Night Tourist by Katherine Marsh
Sammy Keyes and the Wild Things by Wendelin Van Draanen

Best Young Adult

Rat Life by Tedd Arnold
Diamonds in the Shadow by Caroline B. Cooney
Touching Snow by M. Sindy Felin
Blood Brothers by S. A. Harazin
Fragments by Jeffry W. Johnston

The Arrival

The Arrival by Shaun Tan.

I had expected to see this honored by the Printz Committee, but that was not to be…  I consider this one of the top graphic novels of the year for two reasons.  First, I heard buzz about it from those in the graphic-novel know.  Second, I personally loved it.

The Arrival is a wordless graphic novel that tells the story of a man who is forced to leave his wife and child behind and head to a new country.  The land he leaves behind is shadowed with long reptilian tails filled with spikes.  The world he finds when he lands is filled with strange beings, machines that make no sense, and a society he cannot comprehend.  But he struggles on, his small white alien-like being at his side, until he can bring his family to be with him.  The girl is astonished at the new world, but soon learns her own way around and finds herself able to lend a newcomer a hand.

The beauty of this book is in the discovery.  It reads as a science fiction/fantasy graphic novel at first until the reader slowly realizes that the strangeness of the world is really revealing aspects of the universal struggle of immigrants to a new land.  There is a moment where readers will suddenly comprehend the book, and if they are anything like me will gasp and sigh in great satisfaction. 

The illustrations are wondrous, creating a world of astonishing detail, different enough from our own world to make the confusion universal.   Done in black and white and sepia, they combine an old-world quality with science fiction subjects. 

Highly recommended for teens and late elementary students ages 11-17. 

Imperial Galaxy

I have delayed starting a Facebook account for awhile.  I am already hooked on so many other social networking sites that I felt I didn’t need another one.  But that all changed…

Garth Nix has created a Massively Multiplayer Online Game based on his upcoming book, A Confusion of Princes.  You can only play it on Facebook!  So those of you lucky folks who already have an account, go right ahead.  I’m still waiting for my email confirmation…  Impatiently!  LOL