The American Indian Youth Literature Award is to honor the very best writing and illustration by Native Americans and Indigenous people of North America. Established in 2006, it is awarded in even years (2020, 2022, 2024, etc.). In 2020, the Award began to be announced with the ALA Youth Media Awards. Learn more.
Picture Book Award
Picture Book Honors
Celebration
by
Lily Hope
Celebration is almost here!
For four days every other June, the streets of Juneau are filled with Native people of all ages dressed in the signature regalia of clans from throughout Southeast Alaska and beyond. There is traditional song and dance. Arts and crafts. Food. And people speaking local Native languages. This is Celebration, a biennial festival of Tlingit, Haida, and Tsimshian cultures. In this original story, a young child prepares to attend the event with her family. She has been getting ready for months and can hardly wait to sing, dance, and share.
Written by Wooshkindein Da.áat Lily Hope, who is Raven of the T'aḵdeintaan clan. Illustrated Jaax̱snée Kelsey Mata Foote, who is Raven of the Taakw.aaneidí clan.
Baby Raven Reads is an award-winning Sealaska Heritage education program that promotes early-literacy, language development and school readiness for Alaska Native families with children up to age 5 (Description from Sealaska-Heritage Store).
Middle Grade Award
Middle Grade Honors
Young Adult Award
Young Adult Honors
The American Indian Youth Literature Award is to honor the very best writing and illustration by Native Americans and Indigenous people of North America. Established in 2006, it is awarded in even years (2020, 2022, 2024, etc.). In 2020, the Award began to be announced with the ALA Youth Media Awards. Learn more.
Picture Book Award
Picture Book Honors
Middle Grade Award
Middle Grade Honors
Young Adult Award
Young Adult Honors
The American Indian Youth Literature Award is to honor the very best writing and illustration by Native Americans and Indigenous people of North America. Established in 2006, it is awarded in even years (2020, 2022, 2024, etc.). In 2020, the Award began to be announced with the ALA Youth Media Awards. Learn more.
Picture Book Award
Picture Book Honors
Raven makes the Aleutians : adapted from a traditional Native story
by
Gibbons, Janine, illustrator
Middle Grade Award
Middle Grade Honors
Young Adult Award
Young Adult Honors
The American Indian Youth Literature Award is to honor the very best writing and illustration by Native Americans and Indigenous people of North America. Established in 2006, it is awarded in even years (2020, 2022, 2024, etc.). In 2020, the Award began to be announced with the ALA Youth Media Awards. Learn more.
Picture Book Award
Picture Book Honors
Middle Grade Award
Middle Grade Honors
The Wool of Jonesy
by
Jonathan Nelson (Illustrator, Created by); Lee Francis IV (Managing editor)
Jonesy wakes on warm spring morning and as the day goes on he finds himself in new situations. We start on the northeastern edge of the Navajo reservation in the farming community of Hogback, New Mexico. Having just finished high school, Jonesy has been weighing his options for his future. Today, he is in no rush to get moving.
Young Adult Award
Young Adult Honors
The American Indian Youth Literature Award is to honor the very best writing and illustration by Native Americans and Indigenous people of North America. Established in 2006, it is awarded in even years (2020, 2022, 2024, etc.). In 2020, the Award began to be announced with the ALA Youth Media Awards. Learn more.
Picture Book Award
Picture Book Honors
Middle Grade Award
Middle Grade Honors
Young Adult Award
Young Adult Honors
The American Indian Youth Literature Award is to honor the very best writing and illustration by Native Americans and Indigenous people of North America. Established in 2006, it is awarded in even years (2020, 2022, 2024, etc.). In 2020, the Award began to be announced with the ALA Youth Media Awards. Learn more.
Picture Book Award
Middle Grade Award
Middle Grade Honors
Young Adult Award
Young Adult Honors
The American Indian Youth Literature Award is to honor the very best writing and illustration by Native Americans and Indigenous people of North America. Established in 2006, it is awarded in even years (2020, 2022, 2024, etc.). In 2020, the Award began to be announced with the ALA Youth Media Awards. Learn more.
Picture Book Award
Picture Book Honors
Kohala Kuamoo
by
Kekaulelenaeole A. Kawaiae; Aaron A Kawaiae (Illustrator)
Mohala Mai o Hau
by
Robert Lono Ikuwa (Text by); Matthew Kawika Ortiz (Illustrator)
"This contemporary story stems from the authors creativity and draws on universal themes of family, self-worth, and coming of age."--Title page verso.
Middle Grade Award
Free Throw and Triple Threat
by
Jacqueline Guest
Matthew Eagletail is the star player for the Warriors, his basketball team on the Tsuu T'ina First Nation near Calgary.
When his mother remarries, everything in Matthew's life is suddenly different and new: a new school, a new father, five pesky new sisters, a new dog named Precious. Worst of all, he has to quit the Warriors. When he's asked to join his new school's team, the Bandits, he claims he'll never play for the competition. His sister Jazz thinks otherwise, and sets out to prove it.
Free Throw is the story of how one young man come to terms with change and returns to the court--with a little help from his friends. [Fry Reading Level - 4.7
Triple Threat
Matthew Eagletail can't wait until his online friend John Salton flies from San Francisco to Bragg Creek, Alberta for a summer visit. John is almost as big a basketball fan as Matt is, and dreams of being the first coach in the NBA to use a wheelchair.
When Matt's sister Jazz tells them about the upcoming Rocky Mountain Summer Basketball League in Calgary, they decide immediately to get a team together. Unfortunately, so does Matt's archrival, John Beal. Soon the Bobcats and the Mean Machine are fighting it out on the court, determined to win by any means necessary. It's too close to call, until Matt and John get some crucial advice from an unexpected source.
Triple Threat is a basketball novel that smokes down court with hard-hitting action and suspense. [Fry Reading Level - 4.3
Middle Grade Honors
Jordin Tootoo: The Highs and Lows in the Journey of the First Inuit to Play in the NHL
by
Melanie Florence
Hockey is a relatively new sport in Canada's North. It wasn't until 2003 that Jordin Kudluk "Thunder" Tootoo became the first Inuk to play in an NHL game. Although hockey is a rough sport to begin with, Jordin Tootoo is known for having to "fight his way through." Jordin has had more than his fair share of fights both on and off the ice. He's had to overcome the social problems that are associated with the North, fight his way through the discrimination and culture shock he encountered after leaving Rankin Inlet and moving to Alberta to play in the Juniors, and see his way through the grief of losing his NHL-bound older brother and hero, Terence Tootoo, to suicide in 2002.
This new biography explores the struggles and accomplishments of the most recognized role model for young Aboriginal and Inuit people today. [Fry Reading Level - 4.6
Young Adult Award
The American Indian Youth Literature Award is to honor the very best writing and illustration by Native Americans and Indigenous people of North America. Established in 2006, it is awarded in even years (2020, 2022, 2024, etc.). In 2020, the Award began to be announced with the ALA Youth Media Awards. Learn more.
Picture Book Award
Middle Grade Award
Young Adult Award
Between the Deep Blue Sea and Me: A Novel
by
Lurline Wailana McGregor
Moana Kawelo, PhD, has a promising career as a museum curator in Los Angeles. The untimely death of her father--and the gravitational pull of Hawaii when she returns home for his funeral--causes Moana to question her motivations and her glamorous life in California. Between the Deep Blue Sea and Me is the story of Moana's struggle to understand her ancestral responsibilities, mend relationships, and find her identity as a Hawaiian in today's world.
The American Indian Youth Literature Award is to honor the very best writing and illustration by Native Americans and Indigenous people of North America. Established in 2006, it is awarded in even years (2020, 2022, 2024, etc.). In 2020, the Award began to be announced with the ALA Youth Media Awards. Learn more.
General Award
Picture Book Award
The American Indian Youth Literature Award is to honor the very best writing and illustration by Native Americans and Indigenous people of North America. Established in 2006, it is awarded in even years (2020, 2022, 2024, etc.). In 2020, the Award began to be announced with the ALA Youth Media Awards. Learn more.
Picture Book Award
Middle Grade Award
Young Adult Award