The wait is over! The 2020 Caldecott Medal Selection Committee has made its choices: one winner and three honor books.
The wait is over! The 2020 Caldecott Medal Selection Committee has made its choices: one winner and three honor books.
The winner is:
The Undefeated, illustrated by Kadir Nelson and written by Kwame Alexander:
The honor books are:
Bear Came Along, illustred by LeUyen Pham and written by Richard T. Morris:
Double Bass Blues, illustrated by Rudy Gutierrez and written by Andrea J. Loney:
Going Down Home with Daddy, illustrated by Daniel Minter and written by Kelly Starling Lyons:
Congratulations to all!
The big winner this morning is The Undefeated, illustrated by Kadir Nelson. Our readers chose it as a mock honor book. You all also chose Bear Came Along as a mock honor book, and it did receive a Caldecott Honor this morning. Going Down Home with Daddy made a strong showing in our mock vote but didn't quite get into the top tier, although as we noted in our post, if we had gone on to a second and third ballot, it could easily have risen up. And Double Bass Blues wasn't on our ballot, but Nicholl Montgomery wrote about the book here in December.
Remember how we wrote in this post from early 2019 (which we linked to last week here at Calling Caldecott) that our readers tend to have an impressive track record of picking as our mock winners ones that, in the real world, go on to receive Caldecott honors? That did not happen this year. Our readers chose Oge Mora's Saturday as the mock winner, but that book wasn't recognized this morning by the real Caldecott committee. (Many of you may be in mourning about that. Other titles our readers were enthusiastic about, such as Field Trip to the Moon, My Papi Has a Motorcyle, A Place to Land, Another, and Truman, were also passsed over by the committee.)
A few trends we notice with these four books: three of the illustrators are men; all four are artists of color. This is the third instance of a single African American illustrator winning the award (the first two being Jerry Pinkney in 2010 and Javaka Steptoe in 2017). This is the first Caldecott medal for Nelson, though he won honors in both 2007 and 2008. And for all the honor illustrators — Gutierrez, Minter, and Pham — it's their first time for any Caldecott recognition!
Here's where we ask some of our favorite questions: What are your thoughts? Did you watch the webcast this morning, or were you there in person in Philadelphia? Are you surprised by the choices? Are you pleased with the number of honor books named this morning, or did you want more? Did your favorite win? What do you mourn, if anything? As Robin Smith used to always say, it's important to "trust the process," as in: remember that these committee members worked so hard for a whole year and made the choices they did for specific reasons.
With that in mind, we'd love to hear your thoughts.
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