 |
 |
Photo from the
Candlewick Press website.
|
M.T. Anderson
The Astonishing
Life of Octavian Nothing, Traitor to the Nation,
Volume One: The Pox Party
Candlewick
Press
Acceptance speech
Young People's Literature Chair, Margaret
Bechard: It's an honor to represent the
judging panel for the Young People's Literature
award. If I were writing this story, I could not
have created a better group of fellow judges.
Patricia McKissack, Linda Sue Park, Ben Saenz,
and Jude Watson brought intelligence, humor, and
passion to our deliberations. There's no greater
pleasure than talking about and discussing and
yes, heatedly arguing about books with four other
people who care deeply about good writing. And
if you don't think that children's book authors
heatedly arguing isn’t a pretty terrifying
sight, well you haven’t seen children’s
book authors. We had much to discuss. We read
picture books, easy readers, middle grade and
young adult novels, graphic novels, poetry, and
nonfiction. It was exciting and gratifying to
see the depth and breadth of creativity, talent,
and artistic courage exemplified in the children's
books published in this past year. Our committee
looked for stories that would leave us breathless,
for characters that would haunt our lives and
our dreams, for authors who would indeed be vigilant
witnesses to the wonderful and fearful complexity
of life. We found five outstanding authors. The
finalists for this year's National Book Award
in Young People's Literature are M.T. Anderson
for The Astonishing Life of Octavian Nothing,
Volume I: The Pox Party, published by Candlewick
Press; Martine Leavitt, Keturah and Lord Death,
published by Front Street Books, a division of
Boyds Mills Press; Patricia McCormick for Sold,
published by Hyperion; Nancy Werlin, for The
Rules of Survival published by Dial Books,
a division of Penguin Putnam; and Gene Yang, for
American Born Chinese, published by First
Second, a division of Roaring Brook Press. And
the winner of the National Book Award in Young
People's Literature is M. T. Anderson for The
Astonishing Life of Octavian Nothing.
[applause]
M.T. Anderson:
Thank you. Thank you so much Margaret and to the
whole committee. It’s an incredible honor
to be included in this list of books. There are
actually several reasons why it is wonderful,
the most salient of which is that this, I believe,
is the first time that a graphic novel has been
included in the nominees. And I know there is
a lot of the dithering that goes on in the blogosphere
about whether graphic novels are literature or
not, and I think that anyone who has read Gene
Yang's American Born Chinese can see
that it is poignant, it is sophisticated, it is
literature for young people. So anyway, I'm just
really glad that we are leading that charge. I
would just like to thank my parents, my girlfriend
Nicole, and John Bell, the historian who did the
fact checking for this book, The Boston Athenaeum
where I did a lot of the research, and last but
in fact foremost, Candlewick Press, which published
the book. Usually when one goes to a publisher
of children's books and says, ‘Hey, would
you like a 900-page two volume historical epic
for teens, written in a kind of unintelligible
18th-century Johnsonian Augustan prose by an obsessive
neurotic who rarely leaves his house or even gets
dressed,’ usually that children's publisher
will say ‘No, we would not like to buy that
book.’ But Liz Bicknell, my editor, purchased
the book and has just been incredibly supportive
for the last several years. The sales and marketing
department has taken this basically un-sellable
product and has just done amazing things with
it. It's just a testament, I think, to what a
small press can do just by taking risks. So thank
you Candlewick for taking this risk on me, for
showing the incredibly poor judgment to accept
a manuscript that has allowed us to come here
tonight. Thanks. Thank you all.
About the Book
Set against
the disquiet of Revolutionary Boston, this novel,
the first of two parts, re-imagines the past as
an eerie place that has startling resonance for
readers today.
About the Author
M.T.
Anderson is the author of several books for children
and young adults, including FEED, which
was a Finalist for the National Book Award in
2002 and winner of the Los Angeles Times
Book Prize. He lives in Cambridge, Massachusetts.
Suggested Links
www.candlewick.com
Backlist
- Burger
Wuss
- Feed
- Handel, Who Knew
What He Liked
- Me, All Alone,
at the End of the World
- The Serpent Came
to Gloucester
- Thirsty
|