Wednesday, March 27, 2019

Lee & Low Announces New Voices Award and New Visions Award Winners







New York, NY—January 22, 2019—LEE & LOW BOOKS is pleased to announce that SD Youngwolf of Moffat, Colorado is the winner of the company’s nineteenth annual New Voices Award. His picture book manuscript, The Echo People, is the story of two children who go on a special journey with their grandfather and, through their different experiences, learn how we create our own realities through the words and actions we give to the world.

SD Youngwolf is a writer and an award-winning artist who is tribally enrolled in the Georgia Tribe of Eastern Cherokee. His creativity is inspired by traditional indigenous stories and history, and by the young people he meets during his storytelling performances. He hopes that The Echo People will resonate with readers by giving them a stronger sense of responsibility for the way they lead their lives. Youngwolf will receive a prize of $2,000 and a publication contract.

LEE & LOW BOOKS is also proud to announce that Patty Cisneros Prevo of Wheat Ridge, Colorado, will receive the New Voices Award Honor for her picture-book manuscript, Unstoppable: Thirteen Adventures Alongside Athletes with Physical Disabilities. Prevo introduces readers to a variety of modern-day athletes with physical disabilities who have overcome challenging obstacles to achieve great successes in their lives. 

Patty Cisneros Prevo is a two-time Paralympic gold medalist, a first-generation Mexican-American elementary teacher, and a mentor for people with disabilities. She wrote Unstoppable to bring people with disabilities to the forefront of children’s literature and inspire all young readers with these athletes’ exciting stories. Prevo will receive a prize of $1000. 





New York, NY—Tu Books, an imprint of Lee & Low Books, is thrilled to announce the results of its sixth annual New Visions Award for new authors of color. This year, Monica Zepeda has won the New Visions Award for her manuscript, Boys of the Beast. Michelle Jones Coles’ manuscript Woke received the New Visions Award Honor.

Established to increase the number of authors of color writing for children and teens, the New Visions Award is given to a middle grade or young adult manuscript by a new author of color or Native author. Winners receive a cash prize and a publishing contract with Lee & Low Books, a children’s book publisher specializing in diversity. Previous winners include Ink and Ashes by Valynne Maetani, named one of the Best Books of the Year by Kirkus Reviews, and Ahimsa by Supriya Kelkar, named a Notable Social Studies Trade Book.

Boys of the Beast, this year’s winning manuscript, is a young adult contemporary novel about three cousins who go on a road trip after the death of their abuelita. As the miles pass, the boys are surprised to discover that they have more in common—and more to teach each other—than they think.

“As a third-generation Mexican American who doesn’t speak Spanish, I know that not all Latinx stories are immigrant stories,” says author Monica Zepeda. “I wanted to showcase Latinx teens that had wildly diverse backgrounds, even though they’re blood-related.” Zepeda currently serves as the Teen Services Librarian at Beverly Hills Public Library in California, as well as a writer for stage, film, and television.

Zepeda will receive a cash prize of $2,000 and a publishing contract with Lee & Low Books. Publication of Boys of the Beast is planned for fall 2020.

Woke, by Michelle Jones Coles, is a young adult historical fiction novel about Reconstruction centered on the story of Cedric, who was born a slave but rose to secure a front row seat to the struggle for equality as a legislative aide to some of the first Black members of Congress. Cedric’s story, told in diary form, is framed by the story of Malcolm, a modern-day teenager and Cedric’s descendant.

Author Michelle Jones Coles works as a civil rights attorney with the United States Department of Justice. “As a civil rights attorney, I see constant reminders of the legacy of slavery and the harm racism inflicts in Americans’ everyday lives,” Coles says. “The Mother Emanuel massacre lit a fire in me to tell a relatable story about race relations with the hope that it could help Americans learn from our history, so that perhaps we could stop repeating it.”


This year’s other New Visions Award finalists include Chasing Stars by JaNay Brown-Wood, Flying in Colors by Padma Prasad, and The One With a Father by Kit Song.



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