The Michael
L. Printz Award is an award for a book that exemplifies
literary excellence in young adult literature.
2014
Honor
Rowell, R. (2013). Eleanor & Park. New York, NY: St. Martin’s Press.
Two 16-year-olds meet
on a school bus, not by choice, but by shortage of seats and their low social
statuses. He is small and half-Korean,
but has grown up among the other students.
She is new, overweight, red-haired, and dresses strangely. Even though they are at first repelled by
each other, they are destined to fall in love.
Through Eleanor and Park’s alternating voices, readers get a glimpse of
first love, as well as the contrast between Eleanor’s abusive life of poverty
and Park’s imperfect but loving family life.
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Follow-up:
Reading Group Questions to use with this book.
http://us.macmillan.com/static/eleanorandpark/pdfs/Eleanor%20&%20Park%20Reading%20Group%20Questions.pdf
2010
Winner
Bray, L. (2009). Going
bovine. New York, NY: Delacorte Press.
Cameron Smith only
wants to get through high school with a minimum of effort. He suffers from constant comparisons to his
perky, preppy twin sister. He
successfully slides under the radar; that is, until he begins to have bouts of
uncontrollable behavior and terrifying visions that are revealed to be caused
by Creutzfeldt-Jakob’s (mad cow disease), not by drugs as his parents had
suspected. Cameron finds himself with
a terminal diagnosis and the realization that he might be about to die without
ever having lived. He sets off on a road
trip to find a cure, guided only by cryptic clues from a mysterious punk rock
angel and a death-obsessed dwarf. They are joined by an indestructible talking
yard gnome in what is a truly bizarre spring break trip. The
reader must guess what is real and what is hallucinatory.
Follow-up:
Here is a book trailer created by an ELA teacher to use as a teaser before reading the book.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=segA4JzQnKs
Visit the official Website of Libba Bray to find a reading guide with discussion questions:
http://libbabray.com/resources/going-bovine-reading-guide
2010
Honor
Heiligman, D. (2009). Charles and Emma. Harrisonburg, VA: R.R. Donnelley & Sons
Company.
Through letters,
diaries, notebooks, and pictures, Heiligman documents the story of Charles
Darwin and his cousin, wife, and love of his life, Emma Wedgewood Darwin. Emma is very religious, and her faith gives
Charles a lot to think about as he works on his theory of evolution. The story
illuminates the couple’s love, respect, and friendship. Readers are allowed to understand Darwin’s
ideas and how Emma’s responses temper them.
Darwin’s love for Emma is an important factor in his development of a
major scientific theory. The well
researched novel is part history, part biography, and part love story.
Note: This book was also the 2010 winner of the YALSA Exxcellence in Nonfiction.
Follow-up: PreReading Activity and Discussion Questions:
http://media.us.macmillan.com/teachersguides/9780805087215TG.pdf
2006
Winner
Green, J. (2005). Looking for Alaska. New York, NY: Penguin Group.
Sixteen-year-old Miles “Pudge” Halter dreams of
starting fresh at Culver Creek boarding school.
He becomes friends and falls in love with Alaska Young, a gorgeous,
funny, self-destructive, messed-up girl.
She pulls Miles into her reckless world as he looks for the “Great
Perhaps.” Alaska and Miles’ roommate,
Chip, teach him to drink, smoke, and plan elaborate pranks. After a fatal car crash, Miles is left
looking for answers about life and death.
Follow-up:
Looking for Alaska by John Green
Lesson plans and teaching resources
Looking for AlaskaSummary, prereading vocabulary, discussion questions and activities based on the 2 divisions of the novel, extension activities. 12 pages,
Adobe Reader required
Looking for Alaska
A series of lesson plans posted to a preservice teacher blog:
- See more at: http://www.webenglishteacher.com/looking-for-alaska-lesson-plans.html#sthash.YeG5ctCM.dpuf
Another follow-up: Read an interview with author John Green and find questions for discussion at: