Newbery Medal Winners in Fiction, 1950-1979

Many, many moons ago I gave you a poster of the Newbery Medal Novels from 1980 to 2012. This one:

Download this poster here. Download the new poster below.

It took a really, really long time to make because I had to summarize all these books I’d never read into just 20 words or fewer. It was kind of exhausting, and I got distracted, and I never finished the other posters.

Then I read a handful of the Newbery Medal winners seen above, and several times I thought, “Really? This won the Newbery Medal?”

Life is too short to read you’re not impressed with, so I abandoned my project in the summer and started reading from a bigger pool of novels.

I realize that may come off as really stuck up. But I have high, personal standards for juvenile literature. I liked The Graveyard Book, I enjoyed my re-reads of The Giver, The Westing Game and From the Mixed-Up Files…, and I found Good Masters! Sweet Ladies! interesting. A Wrinkle in Time wasn’t as enjoyable to me as an adult—Calvin was a dear, but Meg, whom I loved as a child, I found to be more annoying, and Charles Wallace was…insufferable. Like, pre-dragon-Eustace-Scrubb insufferable.

Anyway, I got a recent comment on that post asking if I had finished the other posters. Short answer, no. Longer answer, with two kids, part-time jobs, etc., pro bono work gets put at the bottom of my gigantic to-do pile.

BUT, I got that comment, and because I haven’t been blogging much and to demonstrate that I DO listen to your comments (and because I feel bad), I scrambled together and finished part 2 of that poster series tonight. Let me know if you catch typos, because InDesign does not have a reliable spell check, and I am sleep-deprived.

Click the button below to download the Newbery Medal Winners in Fiction, 1950-1979.

A couple other notes:

  • Not all of the Newbery winners are included. They didn’t all fit! That’s why these are just the novels. Non-fiction and poetry compilations aren’t included. Sorry.
  • The boxes by the cover images include the date of the award and serve as a check box, so you can keep track of which ones you’ve read.
  • Since I haven’t read some of these books, the blurb may not be the best representation of the novel.
  • I haven’t printed this out myself yet. If the images are a bit fuzzy, it’s because I couldn’t find high-res images of the covers.
  • This is for educational or personal use only. You MAY NOT use these posters for any sort of commercial gain.

Want the books from 1920 to 1949? Let me know! I accept bribery and compliments. Otherwise you’ll have to wait until I get some more spare time, which will hopefully be soon!

Fiction Friday: Newbery Medal Winners in Fiction, 1980-2012

Yes! A day in advance! Again!

You know how I mentioned earlier this week that I started a book club reading and rereading Newbery Award Winners? Well, in preparation for the first meeting, I really wanted a poster of the Newbery Award Winners. And I thought it would be even more nice to have a super short description of the book, to jog our minds if we have already read it, or to make us interested in books we maybe never heard of.

Well, those posters they have in libraries are apparently only available to libraries. I tried to make an account as a homeschool—no dice.

Those nice pretty posters also don’t have a blurb about the books. They have the book name, author, date, and cover. I don’t judge a book by its cover, but I do judge a book by its title. Let’s just say The View from Saturday sounded like a kid version of Divine Secrets of the Ya-Ya Sisterhood, and why read Sarah, Plain and Tall when you can read something like Julie of the Wolves?

I remember really liking Sarah, Plain and Tall. I don’t remember it being about a mail-order bride.

So I made my own posters. And since I love you all dearly, I’m going to share them with you to download, for free. (Note, the link to download the printable version is near the end of the post)

This is a preview image. Click the link at the bottom of the page to download.

I have to admit, though, that I have a couple of confessions to make. 1) I am no longer any good at math. The Newbery Award gave its first medal in 1922. This year is 2012. That means there are 90 books, right? 2012-1922=90. No, there are 91 books. If you just subtract, you aren’t counting the current year. Problem: my layout was 30 books per page. In lieu of creating a new layout (this was my 3rd or 4th), I decided rather to eliminate from my posters the books that were biographies and the books that were collections of poems. While I might be interested in someday reading A Visit to William Blake’s Inn: Poems for Innocent and Experienced Travelers (1989), I can honestly say that I have no desire to pick up Joyful Noise: Poems for Two Voices (1982) after hearing that all of the poems are about insects.

Confession 2) I haven’t read most of these books. Some of them I hadn’t even ever heard of. I think I read mostly Newbery Honors books as a child, with some major exceptions, like The GiverNumber the Stars, and A Wrinkle in Time. So when I went about writing blurbs about the books, I had to read the synopses of the novels from sites like Amazon and Goodreads. I could only fit about 100 characters per novel to keep the posters to a page each. That’s less than a Tweet, and is about 20 words. Try summarizing a book you’ve never read into 20 words or fewer sometime—it’s definitely a head-scratcher.

As much as I enjoyed the challenge (and hope it will help me come up with elevator speeches of my own novels in the future), it is very time-consuming. That’s why I’m going to release one page per week.

So, for today, I give you the Newbery Medal Winners 1980-2012.

A couple other notes:

  • The boxes by the cover images include the date of the award and serve as a check box, so you can keep track of which ones you’ve read.
  • Since I haven’t read some of these books, the blurb may not be the best representation of the novel.
  • I haven’t printed this out myself yet. If the images are a bit fuzzy, it’s because I couldn’t find high-res images of the covers.
  • This is for educational or personal use only. You MAY NOT use these posters for any sort of commercial gain.

See you next week!