2019 Harvey Award Winners

The winners of the 2019 Harvey Awards were announced at New York Comic Con this weekend. Several of the major awards went to books for teens as well as books with LGBTQIA+ subject matter. Here are the winners:

BOOK OF THE YEAR

Hey, Kiddo

Hey Kiddo by Jarrett J. Krosoczka

 

DIGITAL BOOK OF THE YEAR

Check, Please! Book 1: # Hockey

Check, Please by Ngozi Ukazu

 

BEST CHILDREN’S OR YOUNG ADULT BOOK

Laura Dean Keeps Breaking Up with Me

Laura Dean Keeps Breaking Up with Me by Mariko Tamaki and Rosemary Valero-O’Connell

 

BEST MANGA

My Hero Academia, Vol. 1 (My Hero Academia, #1)

My Hero Academia by Kohei Horikoshi

 

Review: Ordinary Hazards by Nikki Grimes

Ordinary Hazards by Nikki Grimes

Ordinary Hazards by Nikki Grimes (9781629798813)

Grimes writes a searing verse memoir of her years growing up with a mother suffering from alcoholism and schizophrenia. Removed from her mother at a young age and separated from her older sister, Grimes found a loving foster family where she discovered the power of writing her feelings and experiences out on paper. She visited her mother occasionally during that time and they were eventually reunited when her mother got sober and remarried. But it wasn’t that simple or easy. Grimes was trapped in a home filled with a cycle of addiction, mental illness and sexual abuse from her stepfather. Told with a strong sense of hope and resilience, this book is a brave look back into a traumatic childhood.

Grimes has created a book that carries readers back into her previous experiences, showing how she survived, how writing helped, and how she found hope and strength in people other than her mother. Grimes has recreated some of her childhood and teen  journals which were destroyed. In these small glimpses told in the voice of her youth she shows her confusion and strength vividly.

Throughout the book, Grimes mentions that she doesn’t have clear memories of much of her youth due to the trauma that was inflicted upon her. Her willingness to explore such painful subjects even though her memories are incomplete or entirely gone is a concrete example of her resilient spirit and hope.

A powerful and poetic look at trauma and the building of a new life. Appropriate for ages 16-adult.

Reviewed from ARC provided by WordSong.