JUDY BLUME TO RECEIVE THE MEDAL FOR
DISTINGUISHED CONTRIBUTION TO AMERICAN
LETTERS FROM THE NATIONAL BOOK FOUNDATION
First Young-Adult Author
To Receive the Award
To Be Honored
on November 17 at
The 2004 National Book Awards Ceremony
New York, New York
— The National Book Foundation will bestow its 2004
Medal for Distinguished Contribution to American Letters upon
Judy Blume, one of the country’s most beloved and widely
read children’s authors as well as one of our most vigorous
activists against censorship. She is the first author of young-adult
literature and the fifth woman to receive the Medal in the
sixteen-year history of the award. She will be honored at
the 55th National Book Awards Ceremony and Benefit Dinner
in New York City on Wednesday, November 17.
In making the announcement, Harold
Augenbraum, executive director of the Foundation, said, “Judy
Blume is the first recipient of the National Book Foundation
Medal for Distinguished Contribution to American Letters whose
primary audience is young readers. Our Board of Directors
feels very strongly about presenting this Award to Ms. Blume,
whose work has influenced and inspired countless children
since the early 70s. Much of her readership first discovered
her books on their own and as suggested reading in school,
and continued to seek out her stories right into their adulthood,
as she has written novels for older readers as well. Ms. Blume’s
active participation in the causes of the literary community
and her struggles against censorship have also been exemplary.”
The award is given to a person,
who, in the opinion of the Board of Directors of the National
Book Foundation, has enriched our literary heritage over a
life of service, or corpus of work. The author of more than
twenty books, Judy Blume has had a tremendous impact on young
people, who turn to her books for help in navigating the travails
of growing up and for characters with whom they can identify.
From Tales of a Fourth Grade Nothing, a comic look
at sibling rivalry, to Are You There God? It’s Me,
Margaret, a coming-of-age classic for girls, Blume gives
children and teens emotional truths void of sentimentality.
Her realistic descriptions of how kids cope with a family
move to the suburbs, divorce, or with their own sexual awakening
have made her an iconic figure and one of the best-selling
authors of all time.
“I’m thrilled by this
unexpected honor,” said Ms. Blume. “We don’t
write hoping to win awards. We write because we have to —
because of a burning need to share our characters and stories.
For those of us who write for young readers, the hope is always
that something we’ve written will so touch a young person
that she or he will become a lifelong reader.”
In the 1980s, Judy Blume experienced
censorship first-hand when she learned that some of her books
were being challenged and placed on restricted shelves in
libraries or even removed. A strong believer in children’s
intellectual freedom and their right to read a variety of
books, Blume responded to the attacks on her books by becoming
a vigorous opponent of censorship. She joined the board of
the National Coalition Against Censorship and has brought
much-needed attention to the issue and to many of the brave
teachers and librarians who fight — at the risk of losing
their jobs — to keep controversial books in their schools
and libraries. In 1999, she collected and edited an anthology
of short stories for young adults, Places I Never Meant
To Be: Original Stories by Censored Writers, which features
work by Norma Fox Mazer, Katherine Paterson, Walter Dean Myers,
and Paul Zindel. All royalties from the sale of the book go
to the National Coalition Against Censorship.
Judy Blume was born in New Jersey
in 1938 and graduated from New York University in 1961. She
began writing stories when she was in her twenties. Are
You There God? It’s Me, Margaret was published
in 1970, bringing her wide public attention and the devotion
of many adolescent girls. In that decade, Blume wrote thirteen
other books: eleven for young readers and one for teenagers,
as well as Wifey, a novel for adults. Her most popular
series for younger readers are the books featuring the irrepressible
Fudge, and among her best-known novels for young adults are
Deenie, Tiger Eyes, and Forever.
Her two other best-selling adults novels are Smart Women
and Summer Sisters. She is the founder and trustee
of The Kids Fund, a charitable and educational foundation.
Her books have sold more than 75 million copies and her work
has been translated into over twenty languages. In 1996, she
was awarded the Margaret A. Edwards Award for lifetime achievement
by the American Library Association, and was named a Distinguished
Alumna of New York University. She has won more than ninety
awards, but says what she values most are the thousands of
letters she receives each month from readers of all ages who
share their feelings and concerns with her.
The previous recipients of the National
Book Foundation Medal for Distinguished Contribution to American
Letters are Jason Epstein, Daniel Boorstin, Saul Bellow, Eudora
Welty, James Laughlin, Clifton Fadiman, Gwendolyn Brooks,
David McCullough, Toni Morrison, Studs Terkel, John Updike,
Ray Bradbury, Arthur Miller, Philip Roth, and Stephen King.
The National Book Awards Ceremony
and Benefit Dinner will take place at the Marriott Marquis
Hotel in Times Square in New York City on Wednesday, November
17. In addition to Ms. Blume’s recognition, the ceremony
will also feature the announcement of the four Winners of
the 2004 National Book Awards in Fiction, Nonfiction, Poetry,
and Young People’s Literature. The highly anticipated
list of 20 Finalists in these four categories will be announced
at a press conference on Wednesday, October 13. Members of
the press interested in attending this invitation-only event
should call Camille McDuffie at Goldberg McDuffie Communications
(212)446-5106.
Updated information regarding the
National Book Foundation’s 2004 Awards Ceremony and
Benefit Dinner, as well as events in conjunction with National
Book Month (October), can be found on the Foundation’s
website www.nationalbook.org.
The National Book Foundation
was established in 1989 to expand the impact of the National
Book Awards — sponsored every year in Fiction, Nonfiction,
Poetry, and Young People’s Literature — beyond
the single focus of literary recognition. The non-profit Foundation
is well-known for its sponsorship of the Awards, which have
been in existence since 1950, and is becoming equally known
for the free educational programs it presents nationwide.
The annual Awards ceremony serves as a benefit for the Foundation’s
charitable efforts.
|