2006 Cybils Winners

Fantasy and Science Fiction

Ptolemy's Gate (The Bartimaeus Trilogy, Book 3)
Jonathan Stroud
Hyperion: Miramax

Ptolemy's Gate receives the first Cybils for Fantasy and Science Fiction for its richly imagined fantasy world, strongly realized and unique characters, delightful language and well-honed plot. As a concluding volume of a trilogy, it delivers everything a final volume should do, taking the story arc to its peak with a climax that is both action-packed and emotionally charged. At the same time, Ptolemy’s Gate stands alone as a story and will inspire readers, children and adults alike, to seek out the previous installments and revisit the world of Bartimaeus over and over again.

Fiction Picture Books

Scaredy Squirrel
by Melanie Watt
Kids Can Press

This eponymous squirrel hits little kids and big alike right where they live: in the numbing comfort of routine and abject fear of The Unknown. This is a tiny book with a big lesson about bravery. Watt makes the most of each page, using repetition and exaggeration to hilariously dissect Scaredy Squirrel's paranoia, from the minutiae of his daily habits to a tour of his emergency kit. When the unexpected finally occurs, the joke's on all of us. Field-tested in libraries and living rooms and at bedsides by the judges, Scaredy Squirrel elicited the most giggles per page and requests for re-reads among a variety of age groups, including parents.

Elementary/Middle Grade Graphic Novels

Amelia Rules! Volume 3: Superheroes
by Jim Gownley
Renaissance Press

Amelia Rules celebrates the power of imagination when school lets out for summer vacation. There's plenty of time for dressing up in capes, fighting a gang of evil ninjas, and investigating the evil conspiracy known as the Legion of Steves. Amelia McBride's adventures are portrayed with warm-hearted good humor. There's plenty of slapstick comedy, which combines with an exploration of some of the serious issues of childhood – moving, growing up, and the secret a new friend tries to hide. Jimmy Gownley's art shifts styles based on his character's vivid inner worlds, portraying superhero space battles and silent movie romances with ease. Amelia Rules can be easily be enjoyed by readers of all ages.

Young Adult Graphic Novels

American Born Chinese
Gene Yang
First Second

American Born Chinese skillfully explores the idea of identity by weaving together three distinct stories – the traditional tale of the Monkey King, Jin Wang's longing for acceptance by his classmates, and popular Danny being plagued by his cousin Chin-Kee who embodies the worst Chinese ethnic stereotypes. Gene Yang uses humor when portraying the perils of adolescence, and his colorful art easily adapts to the tonal shifts of the three stories.

Middle Grade Fiction

A Drowned Maiden's Hair: A Melodrama
by Laura Amy Schlitz
Candlewick Press

It's a mystery story, it's a ghost story, it's delightully gothic and eerie. In A Drowned Maiden's Hair we have a protagonist with a very authentic child voice, and her motivations and feelings are described in clean, nuanced lines. Maud is also a person of her time and place; she never comes off as anachronistic. The story, too, is something of a time and place--the darkness of the Hawthorne estate was like an L.M. Montgomery novel gone delightfully to seed. The adoption of the plucky orphan by the wealthy lady is a trope of the Victorian novel, and yet does not come off as trite or formulaic. It is as if Schlitz had taken familiar characters and plotlines from Victorian fiction and injected them with a realism and emotional force that transcends its familiarity, making it seem new again. Truth--be it in the cries of a widower, or in a tearful confession--is what lets Maude see her true role and path, and ultimately brings redemption.

Non-Fiction, Middle Grade and Young Adult

Freedom Walkers: The Story of the Montgomery Bus Boycott
by Russell Freedman
Holiday House

The story of the Montgomery Bus Boycott has been told many times by many different people and has almost become legend, but in Freedom Walkers, Russell Freedman is not sharing folklore or the iconic stories of civil rights heroes like Martin Luther King Jr. or Rosa Parks. This book tells how ordinary men, women and children planned and worked together to peaceably stand up against the injustice of the segregated transportation system--and won. Their heroism makes the reader ask, "Could I do this? Could I stand up to the threats? Could I walk to school every day for almost a year to make justice happen in my hometown?" Well-chosen historic photographs bring to life the American South of the 1950's. The true story is gripping and well documented. This is a read-in-one- sitting kind of book, which will appeal to young teens up through adults.

Non-Fiction Picture Books

An Egg Is Quiet
written by Dianna Aston; illustrated by Sylvia Long
Chronicle Books

Don't be surprised if some future master birder cites this book as an early influence. Multiple layers of thoughtful, poetic text--about not only birds but also insects, reptiles and sea creatures--make An Egg Is Quiet a book that readers can enjoy quickly or in depth, depending upon their level of interest. The handwriting font gives the feeling of a scientific field journal, and the artwork is of the first class, with outstanding visual variety and clarity. The endpapers alone are breathtaking.

Poetry

Butterfly Eyes and Other Secrets of the Meadow
written by Joyce Sidman, illustrated by Beth Krommes
Houghton Mifflin

Three cheers for Butterfly Eyes and Other Secrets of the Meadow! Each poem is a nature riddle--guessing the answers will keep children hopping. Joyce Sidman's rich, rhythmic language and Beth Krommes' intricate scratchboard illustrations make the Cybils poetry winner a book to return to again and again.

Young Adult Fiction

Nick and Norah's Infinite Playlist
by Rachel Cohn and David Levithan
Knopf Books for Young Readers

Nick and Norah's Infinite Playlist gives us a glimpse into one iconic night of new love. This fast, fun story is filled with heartache and romance, fear and discovery, and a healthy mix of sadness and exhilaration. The narrative gives the alternating perspectives of Nick (supplied by Levithan) and Norah (supplied by Cohn); these narrative voices ring true from the moment Nick and Norah first meet, through the starts and stops of discovering one another and figuring out how to trust in the feelings and each other and themselves. We loved the pace of the story, the development of the lead and supporting characters, and the music and city which served as the perfect backdrop to Nick and Norah's fabulous night.