It’s time to take a look back at the year that was in children’s lit miscellanea.
(Read previous Year in Miscellanea Posts: 2014, 2013, 2012, 2011, 2010, 2009, 2008)
The resmeblance is striking.

Bjorn Borg approves.

The tousled hair. The soulful eyes. Just enough of a five-o-clock shadow to suggest an inner bad boy. After surveying the children’s literature landscape in 2015, no angel was dreamier.

Between Smile, Drama, Sisters, and the Babysitter’s Club books, Telgemeier owned the paperback graphic novel list, occupying multiple spots all year long.
The comedy gods smiled upon the world of children’s literature this year, giving us a book that uses subtle (who am I kidding? Pretty straightforward) mind control tactics to send kids off to dreamland. Super-boring and monotonous, the book comes complete with hilarious directives to read the entire book even if the child falls asleep, and a warning against reading it if someone is operating a vehicle within earshot. But then we all remembered that it was the bestselling book on Amazon and our hearty laughter slowly faded, and we felt sad.
In the documentary The Kings of Comedy, Bernie Mac (R.I.P.) was the final act in a night filled with stars. This is because no one could follow him. He was the biggest personality. He was the most outrageous. He could not be topped. Robo-Sauce is the Bernie Mac of picture book read alouds: it’s the closer because, how can you follow it up? Hilarious and groundbreaking, don’t even try to read anything afterward – just send kids off with saying to themselves, “What just happened?”
Allow Betsy Bird of A Fuse #8 Production to demonstrate:
There were definitely some comparisons to be drawn between MacDonell’s illustrations and the Noir classic The Third Man, starring Orson Welles. Coincidence? You be the judge.
The right combination of classic style (bow tie and wingtips) and modern flair (skinny orange pants and stripy socks? Nice touch, Rog), much like the book itself.
No book this year had better clothes. Ida Pearle, will you be my personal stylist?
(image: coolmomphotos)
Am I getting emotional? Great. I’m getting emotional. Again. Damn you Cassie Beasley!!!
A choose your own dedication.

The Rainbow Loom is a craft device used to make things out of rubber bands. Never did I see it and think, “Kids book.”
That’s why Lucy and the Magic Loom took me by surprise.


Actually, this might be a good name for the game which it spoofs – ’cause I’ve yet to complete a game of Monopoly in my life.
How does that burn feel, Monopoly?
The matching double syllables in the first and last names. The way it rolls off the tongue. The connection to a real-life object. All authors/illustrators should aspire to this sort of pen-name greatness.

If you’ve seen this book in person, you know how cool it is. The vellum jacket is a nice texture match for a real hornet nest. There are see-through bits to show the type. And the case cover has an all-over comb pattern. Nice work all around.
It just feels so nice.

A nice surprise.
It was the color of choice for many of the best books of the year:
The story behind the illustrations took some unexpected turns.


No Boys Allowed: School Visits by a Woman Writer should be required reading for everyone in the children’s literature world.
Two of the year’s most beautiful picture books, Float and My Pen featured paper boats.
The Press Here award goes to a book that carries the torch of Press Here’s deceptively simple interactivity. I vote for this book, which turns a rectangular hole into an opportunity to see the world with fresh eyes.


The was a hotly contested category – there were a lot of cool case covers out there in 2015. But for the sheer visual overload of it Special Delivery takes the cake. With dozens of unique stamps featuring a cast of characters and objects both unexpected and familiar, this is the Sgt. Pepper of picture book case covers. Or, for hip-hop fans The Midnight Marauders of picture book case covers.



Not photoshopped! When Diary of a Wimpy Kid was translated into Latin this year, it went without saying that Pope Francis had to have a copy.


For This Is My Home, This Is My School Bean revisited his childhood – specifically, the childhood he depicted in his great 2013 book Building Our House. The difference? Art style. Can’t say I’ve seen anything like this before.

Left: This Is My Home, This Is My School Right: Building Our House
He’s won this award before, but this year he outdid himself for the latest installment of Captain Underpants. Can you place these names?

Just keep scrolling.

Worth it for the photographs alone, this is a book that makes you want to go out immediately and track down every title mentioned.

Some book award winners go for exuberance. Some for speechless understatement. When Dan Santat won the 2015 Caldecott Medal, he went for humor:
This optical illusion made the perfect endpaper addition for a book about people falling under a trance.

The yellow and pink. The onesie. It grabs your attention and makes you wonder what’s going on inside.

Simple and bold – this cover makes a statement while capturing a key moment in the book. A win all around.

It came out in January, and for the rest of the year no other cover even came close.

We are currently offering this content for free. Sign up now to activate your personal profile, where you can save articles for future viewing
Add Comment :-
Be the first reader to comment.
Comment Policy:
Comment should not be empty !!!