Cybils

  • Home
  • Finalists
  • Winners
  • Subscribe
  • FAQs
  • Awards Store
  • Judging

2012 Finalists
Nonfiction for Tweens & Teens

Bomb: The Race to Build--and Steal--the World's Most Dangerous Weapon
by Steve Sheinkin
Flash Point
Nominated by: Monica Edinger

“In the end, this is a difficult story to sum up. The making of the atomic bomb is one of history’s most amazing examples of teamwork and genius and poise under pressure. But it’s also the story of how humans created a weapon capable of wiping our species off the planet. It’s a story with no end in sight” (Sheinkin 236).

It is something we all learn about in school—the atomic bomb. We know how it ends—the United States and the Allies create the first atomic bomb. What Sheinkin’s Bomb does is show that it was a three-way race to succeed: 1) the Germans are racing to build it first, 2) the Americans are trying to succeed first, and 3) the Soviets are trying to steal the Americans' plans. It is a book about a story we thought we knew, but we end up learning so much more than we could ever expect.

Sheinkin, who once said he writes interesting historical narratives to atone for his previous job of writing history textbooks, has done an amazing job bringing this book to life. It dips, twists, and races towards the end. Well-documented sources, intriguing photographs and an index all lend support to this well-written and engaging work.

-- Stephanie Charlefour, Love, Life, Read

Last Airlift: A Vietnamese Orphan's Rescue from War
by Marsha Skrypuch
Pajama Press
Nominated by: Darshana Khiani

Over 2000 children were orphaned because of the Vietnam War. Last Airlift describes the last Canadian airlift operation from Saigon in 1975 through the eyes of one orphan, Son Thi Anh Tuyet, who was eight years old and suffered from polio. For Tuyet, leaving Vietnam meant a promise of a new life in a new country.

Tuyet’s journey by airplane from Saigon to Toronto, Canada is gripping. Readers, especially those for whom English is a second language, will cheer for this young girl as she and her new family struggle to communicate despite the language barrier. Historic black-and-white photographs, including some of Tuyet as a young child and adult, make this a moving refugee story.

-- Louise Capizzo, The NonFiction Detectives

Moonbird: A Year on the Wind with the Great Survivor B95
by Phillip Hoose
Farrar, Straus & Giroux
Nominated by: Amy @ Hope Is the Word


Temple Grandin: How the Girl Who Loved Cows Embraced Autism and Changed the World
by Sy Montgomery
Houghton Mifflin Books for Children
Nominated by: Paul W. Hankins

Temple Grandin's biography isn't just the story of her success in helping the animals we depend upon for food. It is a walk in her shoes, growing up fiercely stubborn and autistic in a family where her own father demanded that she be committed to a mental institution. Her mother refused, and spent Temple's childhood locating help, from an experienced nanny to the small private schools where Temple found her passions and creativity could bring her lifelong friends, some of whom joined her in her memorable pranks. Her autistic behaviors and outwardly odd choices, though, drew cruel remarks from other students, and sometimes the attention of bullies as well. She found comfort with the horses at her boarding school and the cattle at her aunt's Arizona ranch.

The way that Temple's senses help her to experience the world differently led her to use her creative and constructive talents to design safe and humane buildings for housing animals, especially animals bred for the business of food production. Half of all of the cattle in the U.S. and Canada go through systems she designed to make meat-packing plants better for the animals, and as a result, also safer for the workers and more economical for the companies. The design of the book is inviting and engaging, with many family photographs and drawings of designs. Sy Montgomery's writing is accessible and thoughtful, realistically bringing the reader into the tension and challenges of one autistic life--one who has made the world a better place.

-- Karen Ball, Mrs. B's Favorites

Titanic: Voices From the Disaster
by Deborah Hopkinson
Scholastic
Nominated by: Deb Nance at Readerbuzz

One hundred years have passed since an iceberg sank that famous luxury ocean liner, but Deborah Hopkinson’s Titanic: Voices from the Disaster makes the tragedy feel immediate, relevant, and downright riveting. A seamless blend of passenger narratives, traditional informational text, and archival images guides the reader smoothly from the ship’s creation to its last moments. This retelling is even-handed, but never boring–instead of relying on melodrama, Hopkinson builds tension by emphasizing the many choices, mistakes, and happenstances that led to such horrible disaster. What if the boat had slowed down? What if there were tighter safety regulations, more lifeboats? What if the Californian had answered an SOS? Hopkinson poses these questions and more, encouraging readers to draw their own conclusions; this definitive Titanic text inspires historical thinking and presents the lure of the unsinkable ship to yet another generation.

-- Jessica Tackett, Her Life with Books

Sponsor Us

  • For Your Consideration

    blog advertising is good for you
  • Advertise here for your next book promotion.
    Book-banner150x80_v2-1

2012 Nominations by Genre

  • Book Apps
  • Easy Readers/Short Chapter Books
  • Fantasy & Science Fiction
  • Fiction Picture Books
  • Graphic Novels
  • Middle Grade Fiction
  • Non-Fiction Picture Books
  • Non-Fiction: Middle Grade & Young Adult
  • Poetry
  • Young Adult Fiction

Team Cybils '12

  • Anne
    Cybils Overlord
  • Jennifer
    Nonfiction Picture Books
  • Gina
    Nonfiction MG/YA
  • Jackie
    Young Adult Fiction
  • Jen
    Literacy Evangelist
  • Jone
    Poetry
  • Karen
    Middle Grade Fiction
  • Liz
    Graphic Novels
  • Mary Ann
    Book Apps
  • Pamela
    Fiction Picture Books
  • Sarah
    Blog Editor
  • Sheila
    Fantasy & Science Fiction
  • Terry
    Easy Readers & Short Chapter Books

Panelists & judges

  • Book Apps
  • Easy Readers/Short Chapter Books
  • Fantasy/Science Fiction
  • Fiction Picture Books
  • Graphic Novels
  • Middle Grade Fiction
  • Nonfiction (MG/YA)
  • Nonfiction Picture Books
  • Poetry
  • Young Adult Fiction

Categories

  • Announcements
  • Books
  • Feedback
  • Finalists
  • Judges
  • Media
  • Nominations
  • Profiles
  • Rules
  • Weblogs
  • Winners

Archives

  • April 2013
  • February 2013
  • January 2013
  • December 2012
  • November 2012
  • October 2012
  • September 2012
  • August 2012
  • July 2012
  • June 2012

More...

Welcome

  • Help Support Cybils
  • FAQs
  • About Us
  • 2011 Winners
  • 2011 Finalists (Printer Friendly)
  • 2011 Finalists
  • 2010 Winners
  • 2010 Finalists (Printer Friendly)
  • 2010 Finalists
  • 2009 Winners
  • 2009 Finalists (Printer Friendly)
  • 2009 Finalists
  • 2008 Winners
  • 2008 Finalists (Printer Friendly)
  • 2008 Finalists
  • 2007 Winners
  • 2007 Finalists (Printer Friendly)
  • 2006 Winners
  • 2006 Finalists (Printer Friendly)

Steal our logo

  • Click this link for more sizes

    CybilsLogo2012-Web-Button

Marketplace



  • Shop Indie Bookstores
  • Buy Cybils Bling
    Support This Site
  • All Cybils proceeds go toward a non-cheesy award for our winners

    blog advertising is good for you

Recent Comments

  • website on About The Cybils Awards
  • Bayan escort on Keeping the Cybils Ball Rolling
  • Flech on About The Cybils Awards
  • spelling check on About The Cybils Awards
  • write my essay on About The Cybils Awards
  • legit essay writing services on About The Cybils Awards
  • Rooney Horeys on About The Cybils Awards
  • reasearch paper on About The Cybils Awards
  • write an essay on About The Cybils Awards
  • get your ex back on About The Cybils Awards
Add me to your TypePad People list
Subscribe to this blog's feed
Blog powered by TypePad