Stonewall Book Award – 2015 Winners
Each year the American Library Association (ALA) announces the Youth Media Awards given to outstanding children and young adult books (including audiobooks, videos and graphic novels). This year the awards were presented on Monday Feb 1st, in a ceremony in Chicago, USA.
One of the awards presented was the Stonewall Book Award, which is granted to “English language books that have exceptional merit relating to the gay/lesbian/bisexual/transgender experience” (via ALA’s website).
This year the books recognized were:
Stonewall Book Award –Mike Morgan & Larry Romans Children’s & Young Adult Literature Award
WINNER
“This Day in June,” written by Gayle E. Pitman, Ph.D.,
illustrated by Kristyna Litten and published by Magination Press,
an imprint of the American Psychological Association.
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HONOR BOOKS
“Morris Micklewhite and the Tangerine Dress,” written by Christine Baldacchio,
pictures by Isabelle Malenfant, published by Groundwood Books / House of Anansi Press.
Congratulations to all the books and authors recognized! Here’s to a 2015 filled with more amazing LGBTQAI+ books!
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All of this information was obtained from ALA’s website. You can check out the rest of the awards and winners here.
February Book Club: The Five Stages of Andrew Brawley by Shaun Hutchinson
In February, we’ll be reading The Five Stages of Andrew Brawley by Shaun Hutchinson!
Andrew Brawley was supposed to die that night. His parents did, and so did his sister, but he survived.
Now he lives in the hospital. He serves food in the cafeteria, he hangs out with the nurses, and he sleeps in a forgotten supply closet. Drew blends in to near invisibility, hiding from his past, his guilt, and those who are trying to find him.
Then one night Rusty is wheeled into the ER, burned on half his body by hateful classmates. His agony calls out to Drew like a beacon, pulling them both together through all their pain and grief. In Rusty, Drew sees hope, happiness, and a future for both of them. A future outside the hospital, and away from their pasts.
But Drew knows that life is never that simple. Death roams the hospital, searching for Drew, and now Rusty. Drew lost his family, but he refuses to lose Rusty, too, so he’s determined to make things right. He’s determined to bargain, and to settle his debts once and for all.
But Death is not easily placated, and Drew’s life will have to get worse before there is any chance for things to get better.
A partly graphic novel.
Here’s a great review by Amanda Macgregor at Teen Librarian Toolbox.
Here are the buy links!
We’ll be discussing both on Twitter and on Tumblr.
On tumblr, track and post in the GayYA Book Club tag. You can feel free to post reactions/thoughts as you read, reviews, pictures, introductions of who you are, fan art… anything you want, that’s related to The Five Stages of Andrew Brawley. GayYA’s tumblr account, thegayya, will reblog things so more people will see them!
Twitchat date to be announced! Keep an eye on GayYA’s and Katie’s twitter accounts, and this post. 🙂
Looking forward to reading and discussing with ya’ll! Email vee@gayyya.org if you have any questions.
Author Guest Post: Love, War, and Fairy Tale Endings
by Danny M. Cohen
Early on in my debut novel, Train, teenagers Alexander and Marko make their way through the midnight shadows of Berlin to The Fountain of Fairy Tales in Friedrichshain Park. Statues of Red Riding Hood, Snow White, Hansel, Gretel, and other familiar storybook characters surround the fountain and watch the teenage boys share a kiss. But this is no fairy tale. This is 1943 Germany and the Nazi machinery of deportation and mass-murder is ongoing.
In writing Train, I wanted to tell the hidden stories of Hitler’s often forgotten victims—the Roma, the disabled, homosexuals, political enemies of the regime. And I wanted to write a compelling story that would underscore how the policies and deliberate actions of the Nazi government shattered real lives.
Through the writing process, the story became a fast-paced thriller about love, rescue, and desperation. I found that I had to fight against the temptation to romanticize that history. I had to ensure not only historical accuracy but also historical authenticity. Because in war, and in the face of genocide, there are rarely happy endings.
A problem of mainstream Holocaust literature (and mainstream Holocaust film) is the trend to provide hopeful endings and tidy lessons. When we tell stories about already marginalized people—whether they are gay or disabled or Jewish or Roma—there’s a tendency to resort to simple, optimistic messages. Good against evil. The triumph of the oppressed. After all, don’t we need strong, resilient role models who can show us how to endure victimization and survive against all odds?
But history often tells a different tale. There are countless stories of suffering that died alongside the victims of atrocity. Too many stories—too many lives—ended before their time. Yet, although hidden, unhappy endings are woven into the foundations that hold up our rights today. Even devastating stories can give us collective and individual strength.
I was faced with a challenge. How could I engage my readers—and perhaps even empower them—while being brutally honest?
The answer, I think, may lie in what could have been.
We sometimes forget that, before the rise of Nazism, 1920s Germany was somewhat of a haven for same-sex love and sexual freedom. Women and men flocked to Berlin’s gay bars and cafés. German scientists argued in support of understanding homosexuality as natural. Activists collected signatures for petitions to overturn homophobic laws.
But when those bars and cafés were closed down, when the Nazis threw that groundbreaking research onto their bonfires, when Hitler’s government used those petitions to hunt and imprison homosexuals, a thriving community and progressive culture were destroyed.
Yet, throughout the Nazi era, women and women, and men and men, and girls and girls, and boys and boys continued—in secret—to fall in love, to dream, to plan their lives together. Some lesbians and gay men hid their identities by marrying one another. Some went into hiding. Some tried to escape Nazi-occupied Europe.
Hiding from Nazi soldiers, on a mattress in an abandoned wine cellar, Alexander and Marko review their plan to escape to London. They’ll find Alexander’s family. They’ll get a place of their own. Eventually, Alexander will study cartography. Marko will train as an engineer. In a few hours, they’ll have their false papers and train tickets out of Hitler’s capital. Before their attempt to escape begins to unravel, there is the hope and a real possibility of that sweet ending—one that we all wish for ourselves.
Do we need fairy tale endings? Yes, of course, but only when history allows.
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Danny M. Cohen is a writer of human rights fiction. He’s also a learning scientist, education designer, and Holocaust scholar at Northwestern University. His debut novel, Train – a young adult thriller inspired by hidden history – is published in partnership with Unsilence Project. Born and raised in London, Danny now lives in Chicago with his husband and their daughter. Read more about his work here: www.dannymcohen.com and follow him on Facebook here: https://www.facebook.com/dannymauricecohen
Buy Train on Amazon or Amazon UK!
Check out our interview with Danny, here!
Author Interview: Danny M. Cohen
Today we are talking with author Danny M. Cohen about his debut novel, TRAIN, which comes out today! Happy release day Danny!
About the book:
TRAIN is a YA historical thriller with a particular focus on the Nazis’ persecution of homosexuals. This novel is self-published in partnership with Unsilence Project.
“This thriller gives voice to the unheard victims of Nazism — the Roma, the disabled, homosexuals, intermarried Jews, and political enemies of the regime.” (via Danny Cohen’s website)
Over ten days in 1943 Berlin, six teenagers witness and try to escape the Nazi round-ups of Jews and Roma. Giving voice to the unheard victims of Nazism — the Roma, the disabled, homosexuals, intermarried Jews, and political enemies of the Nazi regime — this historical thriller will change how we think about Holocaust history.
Marko screwed up. But he’s good at swallowing his fear.
By now, the 17-year-old ‘Gypsy’ should be far from Nazi Germany. By now, he should be with Alex. That’s how they planned it. But while Marko has managed to escape the Gestapo, Alex has been arrested in the final round-ups of Berlin’s Jews. Even worse, Marko’s little cousin Kizzy is missing. And Marko knows he’s to blame.
Yet the tides of war are turning. With hundreds of Christian women gathered in the streets to protest the round-ups, the Nazis have suspended the trains to the camps. But for how long? Marko must act now. Against time, and with British warplanes bombing Berlin, Marko hatches a dangerous plan to rescue Alex and find Kizzy.
There are three people who can help: Marko’s sister with her connections to the Resistance, Alex’s Catholic stepsister, and a mysterious Nazi girl with a deadly secret.
Nadia: Today is your release day! Happy pub-day! 🙂 What does it feel like? Anything cool you are doing to celebrate today?
Danny: First of all, it’s an honor to be interviewed by GayYA.
I’m so excited this day is here. I’m nervous, too, of course, but mostly because so many people care so deeply about what my novel, Train, represents. Train is about real, hidden histories of the Holocaust that I hope will start some amazing and surprising conversations.
But celebrations will have to wait. Today is Holocaust Remembrance Day—it’s exactly 70 years since the liberation of Auschwitz. Tonight, I’ll be giving a public talk in Chicago on the question, What Is The Future of Holocaust Education?
N: Without being spoilery, what can you share about your debut TRAIN and its characters? Why should people give it a try?
D: At the heart of Train is a gay romance and two rescue stories inspired by real Holocaust survivor testimonies—the kinds of stories we rarely hear.
Marko, a seventeen-year-old ‘Gypsy,’ is keeping a dangerous secret. And he’s frightened—but not for himself. His best friend, Alexander, has just been arrested by the Gestapo in the final round-ups of Berlin’s Jews, and Marko has a plan to save him. At the same time, Marko’s sister, Tsura, is determined to travel to a Nazi camp for Roma on the edge of the city, to find their mother and aunt. But when their little cousin, Kizzy, goes missing, Marko and Tsura’s plans begin to fall apart. The characters draw us into questions about courage and hope and fear and fighting for the people we love.
N: What would you say was the best thing (or your favorite) about writing TRAIN?
D: I loved making sure that every event in Train—down to the minute—was historically accurate. I knew where the story needed to go, but my research (with advice from some brilliant Holocaust historians) dictated each plot twist and the book’s most incredible and haunting moments.
For example, when I was reading testimonies and historical reports about Marzahn, a Nazi camp for Roma on the edge of Berlin, I realized I’d unintentionally set a pivotal scene of the story during an Allied bombing raid on the city. So I had to rewrite that scene. Amazingly, the inclusion of the air raid changed the direction of the story and brought Train closer to historical truth.
N: I recently learned you work as a designer of Holocaust education. What does your work entail?
D: Being a Holocaust educator means I get to be a storyteller every day. Holocaust history can be entirely overwhelming, but we can make it accessible and relevant if we focus on the stories of individuals. Then, we need to connect those individual stories with other stories. One story plus another story plus another story, until we begin to have a sense of the big picture.
I have the honor of training educators to lead tours of Holocaust museums. I work with teachers. I work with communities. I help educators think about the appropriate (and avoid inappropriate) ways of engaging teenagers in urgent questions about human rights and our collective responsibilities to take action against atrocities around the world today.
N: You founded a non-profit dedicated to teaching and human rights, the “Unsilence Project.” It sounds like incredible work, what can you tell us about the project?
D: We break open taboos. Many educators have a hard time talking about certain issues and histories with young people. Unsilence Project creates free story-driven educational programs—and offers educator training—to engage young people in conversations about transgender rights, sexual violence, and other topics we struggle to talk about.
Train is the central text of Unsilence Project’s inaugural educational program, Overlapping Triangles, which we’ll be rolling out across the U.S.—as well as overseas—over the next year or so.
N: How difficult is it to talk to people about this subject? I remember being in high school, and finding out there are people out there who actually deny the existence of the Holocaust. Have you encountered this kind of trouble before?
D: The first Holocaust deniers were the Nazis themselves. When they realized they would lose the war, they started to burn evidence of their crimes. But there was too much evidence to destroy. If a student says to me, “My friend’s Mom says the Holocaust never happened,” I reply, “Look at all the photographs, watch the testimonies, read as much as you can, and then decide for yourself.”
As for the challenge of engaging people in the history: Some people can’t stomach the details of Holocaust history at all. Many people suffer from nightmares after reading too much about the Nazis’ camps and careful methods of murder. Train isn’t a light read. The story is dark. But it reflects the realities of human history. Sometimes we have to force ourselves to look.
N: Do you think teaching has influenced the way you write? If so, how?
D: I actually think it’s the other way around. How I write has changed how I teach. Every class I create starts with a hook, a compelling question, or even a surprising activity. From the start of any lesson, I have to keep the students on the edges of their seats. I have to keep them asking, “What will happen next?” And every class has to end on a cliffhanger that makes them excited to come to the next session. I know I’m doing a great job when the students can’t stop asking questions. And sometimes I have to stop myself from giving away spoilers. “Good question,” I’ll say. “But you’ll have to wait until next week before we answer it.”
N: When I read the summary for your book I was fascinated! The phrase “the unheard victims of Nazism” particularly struck me. What made you write about these unheard voices in particular? And since you could have easily written an adult book about this, why did you decide to make it YA?
D: For many decades, so many people and institutions—including the Polish government, some German politicians, some conservative Christians, and some ultra-Orthodox Jews—have opposed the recognition of homosexuals as victims of Nazism.
The Roma and Sinti—who were rounded up across Europe and murdered by the Nazis and their collaborators—as well as people with disabilities—faced many of the same barriers: denial of reparations, denial of victimhood, denial of dignity and commemoration. I trained as an education designer and I chose to dedicate my work to the unsilencing of these hidden histories.
I didn’t set out to write a novel. But over time, it became obvious that writing a page-turner for teenagers would be the most effective way of changing our collective memories. If thousands of middle school and high school students read Train, then these stories—of homosexuals, of Roma, of people with disabilities—alongside Jewish stories of the Holocaust, will be known by the next generation.
What’s great news is that other scholars and educators are so supportive of my work. For example, I’m working closely with the Illinois Holocaust Museum and, tomorrow, I’ll be running an all-day training for sixty Chicago teachers on how to teach Train and its hidden histories. And this is just the beginning.
N: TRAIN is your debut novel. But according to my research, you are not a first time writer. What can you tell us about your other work?
D: Last month, my choose-your-own-pathway mystery, The 19th Window, was launched. You can try to solve the mystery here.
I’ve always been a writer. Since I was in primary school in the UK, I wanted to be an author of fiction. I remember handing in a 50-page fantasy story about a kick-ass teenage girl battling a wicked sorcerer!
For years, I’ve been writing accessible non-fiction—mostly for history and education design journals—about the design of Holocaust and genocide education. I’ll continue to write for academic publications, but I’m starting to find my voice through human rights fiction for young adults, and it’s exhilarating.
N: What’s next on your horizon? Do you think you’ll write more LGBTQIA+ YA in the future?
D: Yes, absolutely. In fact, I’m working on my second novel—Hide Or Speak, a contemporary YA human rights thriller that has some brilliant queer protagonists.
In the middle of a U.S. election, the daughter of a presidential nominee goes missing, and the media and the public become caught up in a global treasure hunt to save her life. Behind the scenes, panic is overshadowed by a family secret that threatens to bring down the political campaign but could also change the lives of thousand of people across the world.
N: Thanks so much for talking the time to talk with us Mr. Cohen! And congrats on the new release!
D: Thank you and thanks for having me!
And there you have it folks! Doesn’t TRAIN sound fascinating? I for one can’t wait to pick my copy up and check the story out!
Check out Danny’s guest post here.
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About the author:
Danny M. Cohen is a learning scientist, fiction writer, and education designer. Danny is also the founder of Unsilence Project.
An author of human rights fiction for young adults, his works include the new historical novel Train, the short story Dead Ends, the choose-your-own-pathway mystery The 19th Window, and the forthcoming contemporary thriller Hide Or Speak.
Born and raised in London, Danny lives in Chicago with his husband and their daughter.
Call For Guest Bloggers
Welcome to our first monthly call for guest bloggers! Each month we will put up a list of topics, prompt questions, or specific kinds of people we’re looking for submissions on/from.
For this first call, we want to hear from some teens, twenty-somethings, authors, agents, and editors. We’re interested in co-written posts as well, so if you want to grab a friend or colleague to write with you about one of these, that would be great! We’re also interested in interviews. Below are some prompt questions about specific things we’re really interested in hearing about. Your post can touch on multiple questions, but it doesn’t need to!
How to Submit a Guest Post: Email your submission to vee@gayya.org You may use one of two formats:
1) Email us with a little bit about yourself, your topic idea, and a link to your blog/other writing sample (see note below). We will consider and get back to you based on the quality of your writing samples, if we think your take on the topic would be a good fit for our blog, and how many other submissions we get.
2) Email us the blog you would like to submit in its entirety. We will review the submission and get back to you within the week!
A couple notes:
Please be aware that we try to avoid repeating similar takes on identical topics. The more specific you can be, the more likely we are to accept your submission. Don’t hesitate to send in a few topics (no more than 5) and we’ll let you know which ones we can accept.
Please keep your post between 250 and 1,000 words. If it is over or under either of those numbers and you feel the length is necessary, include a line in your email explaining why.
If you are a teen or twenty-something interested in writing about one of these topics but don’t know if your writing will be “good enough” or don’t have a writing sample, PLEASE send in your idea anyways! We are happy to work with you to develop, edit, and polish your post.
How to Submit an Interview:
We’re open to interviews of you, and interviews that you would like to conduct with someone else. For both, you will have to come up with the questions.
If you would like to submit an interview please email us with a little bit about yourself, a link to your blog or social media, which type of interview you would like to do, and all of the interview questions (answers are not necessary). If you will be interviewing someone else, please get their agreement beforehand, and include information about them as well.
The deadline for submissions is the 30th of January. You should hear back from us within the first week of February!
(Also note that we’re always open for guest post submissions on any subject. See here for more details.)
Email me at vee@gayya.org if you have any questions.
I look forward to reading your submissions!
Some prompt questions for subjects we’d like to hear about from TEENS (open to twenty-somethings as well):
- Are you a casual reader of queer YA, or are you very critical? Do you have a place where you review them?
- Do experiences in queer Young Adult novels reflect your own?
- What effect do queer YA novels have in your life?
- Do you read books with queer characters that identify differently than you?
- If you read a lot of queer YA, how do you do it? Library, bookstore, e-books… Do you ever feel like you have to hide what you’re reading?
- If you read fanfic, how do you think the representation matches up?
- Why is it important to have queer YA books?
- What was the first queer YA book you read?
- For older teens or twenty-somethings: As you grow further from being a young adult, have you stuck with queer YA, or moved more to NA or Adult? Why?
Authors:
- What is the publishing world like right now for books with queer characters? It’s been awhile since we’ve heard of anything being ‘straightwashed’ but it doesn’t seem to be exactly in a completely accepting place yet.
- We’ve heard it said that publishers will only take a certain “type” of queer: no one who’s ace, aro, trans, bi, pan, intersex. OR, they aren’t allowed to have happy endings, or only coming out stories, etc.
- If you’re a self-pubbed author, or pubbed from a small press, do you think that makes a difference? Are you able to have more diverse types of queerness? If so, do you think it’s easier/harder to sell it? Additionally, do you ever find yourself editing queerness out because you think it won’t sell?
- We hear a lot from authors who are adamant about more representation for queer teens, especially ace, aro, nonbinary, trans, pan, intersex, and bi. But most of the ones who say this haven’t written anything like this. Why is that? Is it just that awareness has been raised so suddenly that they’re already wrapped up in other projects? Is there another reason? If so, how do you think we could change it?
- What kind of research do you do for queer characters? In particular, we’re wondering if you have gone to tumblr or other sites where queer people talk openly about their experiences, the things that drive them up the wall about how their identity is represented, how they’d like to be portrayed…etc. Though of course we’re interested in the other research that you do!
- Has your book received any criticism from LGBTQIA+ people? What do you do with it if you have?
- For authors who haven’t written any queer characters: is there a reason you haven’t written any? Do you plan to?
- Has something of yours ever been edited to near-ambiguity?
- How would you like to see the publishing industry change?
- How would GayYA be able to serve you better, as an author? What types of things could we do that we haven’t been doing? Or what things are we doing now that we should definitely continue with?
Agents/Editors:
- Does your editing/acquiring process change when there are queer characters? Have you ever ‘edited out’ queerness?
- Do you do research on the identity the author is representing?
- Does the queerness impact who you try to sell it to?
- Do you think agents/editors/publishers only accept a certain “type” of queer?
- If you are queer yourself, do you think that affects how you look at manuscripts?