2018 PNBA Book Awards
Using both poetry and prose, Alexie lays bare his complicated feelings about his "wildly intelligent, arrogant, opinionated, intimidating" mother's life and death, weaving a tapestry of memories both harrowing and hilarious. His complex exploration of grief and reconciliation leaves no question unasked, no cruelty unexposed, and no pain hidden. Readers will be grateful for the opportunity to understand a conflicted son mourning an imperfect mother.
—PNBA Awards Committee Hachette Book Group / Little, Brown and Company Shelftalker |
This is the story of America at war with itself, and Omar El Akkad has some news for you: it's more frightening than you could ever imagine. Using years as a professional journalist as his catalyst, El Akkad imagines an America fighting over fossil fuel, where the sides fall via familiar divisions: North and South, blue and red. American War is a beautifully written but brutal wake-up call for all of us who think it can't happen here. —PNBA Awards Committee
Penguin Random House / Alfred A. Knopf Shelftalker |
As with so many of the best stories, this one begins with a mistake: specifically, an errant splotch on an otherwise perfect illustration. While this mistake easily evolves into a feature within Luyken’s developing pen-and-ink drawings, the mistakes just keep coming. And they keep turning into wonderfully charming good ideas until a whole and beautiful little world is created, mistakes and all. The ever-encouraging message about turning mistakes upside down or right side up makes this the perfect book for a budding (or well-entrenched) perfectionist! —Phinney Books
Penguin Random House / Dial Books for Young Readers Shelftalker |
In 2008, artists Chandler O’Leary and Jessica Spring made a letterpress broadside featuring a quote by suffragist Elizabeth Cady Stanton: “Come, come my conservative friend, wipe the dew off your spectacles and see the world is moving.” This began a years-long project, printing broadsides inspired by feminists throughout history and donating a portion of the proceeds to appropriate causes. This book collects all twenty-four broadsides in luscious color. While O’Leary and Spring’s definition of “feminist” is broad at times, they dig deep to feature lesser-known and under-lauded women. Wonderful for budding activists and designers. —Elliott Bay Book Company
Penguin Random House / Sasquatch Books Shelftalker |
Wade and Jenny divorced after that horrific day on the mountain years before. Ann, Wade’s new wife, wishes to unravel the mystery of that day yet, fearing his pain, she can't bring herself to confront her him. As the years pass and he slips into early dementia, Ann sees her last chance for answers disappearing along with Wade's compromised mind. Lush with details of Ann's detailed excavation of the imagined inner lives of Wade, Jenny, and their children—the complex web of their actions, motivations, repercussions—Idaho is a devastating and utterly gorgeous tale of marriage, mistakes, guilt, and redemption.
—PNBA Awards Committee Penguin Random House / Random House Shelftalker |
Surfer, sailor and conservationist Jonathan White has an obvious love for the sea, but this lyrical tribute of science, history and travel tales is much bigger than the author himself. Tides elucidates how the cycle of life on Earth maintains a steady beat with the ebb and flow of the tide and what’s at stake when the rhythm of the ocean is disrupted by climate change. The book is peppered with detailed interviews and is rich with photographs, illustrations, and diagrams that further enhance this captivating read. —PNBA Awards Committee
Trinity University Press Shelftalker |
Indie Spirit Honor
Brian Doyle
Lake Oswego/Portland, OR
Brian Doyle
Lake Oswego/Portland, OR
Imagine all of these ideas lined up inside him—mutterings, musings, minutia, magic—so tightly packed that by absolute necessity they escape in giant gorgeous bursts of words and laughter and knowing. Once released, there is no stopping them. —Committee Comment Shelftalker |