Collecting Childrens Picturebooks: Caldecott First Editions Archives

Book Blogs

Creative Commons License
This weblog is licensed under a Creative Commons License.

Add to My Yahoo!

Main

January 17, 2008

First Edition Make Way For Ducklings

A first edition Make Way For Ducklings, Robert McCloskey's 1942 Caldecott Medal winning book, has recently surfaced for sale. We haven't seen a copy for years, so it will be interesting to see how long this book stays on the market. From the item description:

MAKE WAY FOR DUCKLINGS
Robert McCloskey     
Book Price: US$ 9000.00

Description: Good+ in Very good dust jacket.

Looks like this copy was possibly used for review in a magazine or newspaper, as one page towards the center has been exacto knifed out, and at the top there is typewriter print "Sunday Book Page 2 cols ducks". The page was then taped back in with 3 small pieces of clear (now browned) tape on one side, and one long piece of clear (now browned) tape on the other side. Restoration work could probably fix it, but I have not confirmed that. Else the book would be very good.

The pages are clean and complete, binding is strong. Light shelfwear, previous owner name neatly inside front cover. The dust jacket has light shelfwear, a little fading at very edge, a couple tiny edgetears and light edgechips. A solid very good.

Original price of 2.00 is intact on flap. No medal, of course. First printing with "First Published August 1941" and no other printings listed. Rear flap is a write up of Lentil, and about the author. Potentially the scarcest of the Caldecott winners. 9X12. Illustrated by Robert McCloskey. Bookseller Inventory # 6838

The book is being offered via ABE, click here


Linda and Stan Zielinski, authors of the Children's Picturebook Price Guide, are "serious collectors having fun with fun books."

Links Are Our Friends

The information offered on the website and blog is offered free of charge. If you find the information useful, then kindly link or share the post with a parent, teacher, librarian, bookseller, or collector. Thank You.


January 15, 2008

ALA Announces 2008 Caldecott Award Winners

2008 Medal Winner

Hugo Cabret book cover image

The 2008 Caldecott Medal winner is The Invention of Hugo Cabret by Brian Selznick (Scholastic)

From an opening shot of the full moon setting over an awakening Paris in 1931, this tale casts a new light on the picture book form. Hugo is a young orphan secretly living in the walls of a train station where he labors to complete a mysterious invention left by his father. In a work of more than 500 pages, the suspenseful text and wordless double-page spreads narrate the tale in turns. Neither words nor pictures alone tell this story, which is filled with cinematic intrigue. Black & white pencil illustrations evoke the flickering images of the silent films to which the book pays homage.

Hugo Cabret winning the Caldecott is very surprising - we thought it might win the Newbery, never even considered a 500 page book winning, in light of the Caldecott's key qualifying criteria:

"The Medal shall be awarded annually to the artist of the most distinguished American picture book for children published in English in the United States during the preceding year. There are no limitations as to the character of the picture book except that the illustrations be original work."

It takes the loosest interpretation of 'picture book' for Hugo Cabret to qualify.

From Brian Selznick:

"My new book, The Invention of Hugo Cabret, is a 550 page novel in words and pictures. But unlike most novels, the images in my new book don't just illustrate the story; they help tell it. I've used the lessons I learned from Remy Charlip and other masters of the picture book to create something that is not a exactly a novel, not quite a picture book, not really a graphic novel, or a flip book or a movie, but a combination of all these things."

Selznick even calls it a "novel in words and pictures".

From Publisher's Weekly:

Booksellers React to Top Children’s Prizes
By Diane Roback -- Publishers Weekly, 1/14/2008 4:30:00 PM

"Several booksellers praised the Caldecott committee for “pushing the envelope” by awarding the medal for the year’s most distinguished picture book to The Invention of Hugo Cabret, an 533-page illustrated novel—it’s the first time that the Caldecott has ever been given to a novel.

Elizabeth Bluemle, co-owner of Flying Pig Bookstore in Shelburne, Vt., predicted “There will be a lot of discussion as to whether it’s a true Caldecott winner. It’s not a picture book in the way that we like to think of a picture book, but the argument can be made that it works as a picture book, in that the words and art work together. It does break new ground in how a book is made, and I think it’s great that it was recognized.”

“We all love Hugo Cabret,” said Laura Moline, manager of Adventures for Kids in Ventura, Calif. “We’ve sold lots of copies for all different ages. I was wondering if a book could win the Caldecott and the Newbery in the same year—that’s what we thought might happen. It’s so much an illustrated book and it’s also so much a novel. It’s something different; it’s something new.”

Several librarians phoned Valerie Koehler, owner of Houston’s Blue Willow Bookshop, on Monday, asking her, “Can you believe they picked a novel for the Caldecott? Can you do that?” Her response? “As long as it fits their parameters, as an illustrated book, that’s fine. It’s thrilling when [the winner] is something we can get behind."

2008 Honor Books

Henry's Freedom Box

Henry's Freedom Box: A True Story from the Underground Railrod by illustrated by Kadir Nelson, written by Ellen Levine (Scholastic)

Inspired by an antique lithograph, Kadir Nelson has created dramatically luminous illustrations that portray Henry “Box” Brown's ingenious design to ship himself in a box from slavery to freedom.

First the Egg

First the Egg, written and illustrated by Laura Vaccaro Seeger (Roaring Brook/Neal Porter)

Laura Vaccaro Seeger's innovative concept book on transformations, First the Egg uses strategically placed die-cuts to provide an astonishing visual explication of the word “then.” Her richly textured brushstrokes creatively reveal the process of metamorphosis for young readers.

The Wall

The Wall: Growing Up Behind the Iron Curtain, written and illustrated by Peter Sís (Farrar/Frances Foster)

The Wall: Growing Up Behind the Iron Curtain, a graphic memoir of Sís's youth in Prague, brilliantly weds artistic and design choices to content: tight little panels with officious lines and red punctuation; full-bleed line-and-watercolor spreads of nightmares and dreams; color and absence of color.

Knuffle Bunny Too

Knuffle Bunny Too: A Case of Mistaken Identity, written and illustrated Mo Willems (Hyperion)

Willems sets the stage for one of the most dramatic double-paged spreads in picture-book history in Knuffle Bunny Too: A Case of Mistaken Identity. Masterful photo collages take Trixie and her daddy through their now-familiar Brooklyn neighborhood to the Pre-K class where Trixie discovers that her beloved Knuffle Bunny is not “so one-of-a-kind anymore.”

The Newbery and Caldecott Medals and Honor Book seals are property of the American Library Association and cannot be used in any form or reproduced without permission of the ALA Office of Rights and Permissions.


Linda and Stan Zielinski, authors of the Children's Picturebook Price Guide, are "serious collectors having fun with fun books."

Links Are Our Friends

The information offered on the website and blog is offered free of charge. If you find the information useful, then kindly link or share the post with a parent, teacher, librarian, bookseller, or collector. Thank You.


February 01, 2007

Twenty Caldecott Medal Books

We recently performed an internet search for the first twenty Caldecott Medal books, wondering how many first editions are currently being offered for sale. The searches were performed across multiple book sites, ABE, ABAA, and Bookfinder, and were filtered for first edition books with dust jackets.

Across the twenty Medal winning books, there are twenty-seven first edition books currently for sale, with an average asking price of $742. In our survey we did not adjust the asking price to the condition of the book being offered, so the average price should be used judiciously.

Surprisingly, four copies of The Biggest Bear are on the market, the highest quantity for sale across the respective sample set. This book is normally a tough find in first edition format. In 1953, at the time of the award, Lynd Ward was a highly respective graphic artist, well known for his accomplished wood cuts in stylized artistic books. Barry Moser is the nearest analogy to Ward in the pool of contemporary illustrators.). Ward had been a successful graphic artist and book illustrator for twenty years, before he decided to author and illustrate The Biggest Bear, his first children’s book. The 1960 Weekly Reader Children's Book Club Edition quite commonly surfaces for sale on the internet.

Seven of the twenty books are not currently being offered for sale on the internet. As expected, Virginia Lee Burton’s The Little House and Robert McCloskey’s Make Way For Ducklings are not currently available. First editions, for either book do not surface for sale very often. Since 2000, we have seen only one first edition copy of The Little House for sale (Sigh…regrets abound). I cannot remember a copy of Make Way For Ducklings for sale; a copy sans DJ is currently being offered for $1500.

It is a bit surprising that The Rooster Crows, White Snow, Bright Snow, and Cinderella are not currently on the market. Each of these books are not scarce in first edition format. The Rooster Crows is a Maud & Miska Petersham book, the 1946 Caldecott being a recognition for nearly 25 years of accomplished work in the picturebook market (the 1924 Poppy Seed Cakes, in first edition format, is one of many classic collectible books by the Petershams). Roger Duvoisin and Marcia Brown were at the pinnacle of their respective careers at the time of their first Caldecott Medal awards. Marcia Brown has won nine Caldecott awards, including three Medal books, and now tied with David Weisner for the most Medal awards (Weisner winning his third last week for Flotsam).

The Little Island, illustrated by Leonard Weisgard, is a bit tougher to find, in part due to authorship by Margaret Wise Brown, under the pseudonym 'Golden Macdonald'. Books authored by Brown have a collectible following, with The Little Island being the eighth book she wrote under the Macdonald pseudonym. Brown wrote her ninth, and last book as 'Golden Macdonald' some ten years later, in 1956, Whistle For The Train.

Finders Keepers, illustrated by Nicholas Mordvinoff, is the seventh of the Caldecott Medal books not currently for sale in the market. This book does not surface too often in first edition format, in part because it has never had a large following. One of several peculiar books awarded the Caldecott Medal by the ALA, the illustrations seem as contemporary today as they seemed at the time of publication.

Twenty Caldecott Medal Books

We intend to repeat this survey on a regular basis, and would enjoy hearing your support, or not, to that end. Regularity? Likely 3 or 4 times per year feels about right to us. Your thoughts would be welcome.


Linda and Stan Zielinski, authors of the Children's Picturebook Price Guide, are "serious collectors having fun with fun books."

Links Are Our Friends

The information offered on the website and blog is offered free of charge. If you find the information useful, then kindly link or share the post with a parent, teacher, librarian, bookseller, or collector. Thank You.


January 24, 2007

Caldecott Medals - Navigation

Use the links in the blog navigation pane to find first edition identification points for Caldecott Medal books, grouped by year. 

On our website is an index page to each of the first edition identification points on this blog: 
First Edition Identification Points

The index page is more convenient to use then navigating through the listings on the blog, especially as we post identification points for more books.  The index page will lag the blog posts by a day or two, however I will try to keep it fairly up-to-date.

[Note:  In many cases, if you are viewing the post from the blog home page or an index folder, you should click on the ‘Permalink’ at the end of the post to see the full width of the photographs.  The photographs are often truncated on the blog home page or category folder due to width issues.  We use a maximum photo width of 1200 pixels on some of the side-by-side comparison shots.  On most monitors, the full width of the photo can only be seen if you view the individual item’s Permalink posting.]

Caldecott Medal Book Values

If you are interested in the estimated market value of Caldecott Medal books, then click Caldecott Medal Book Values

The illustrator’s name is a link to an eBay search for that illustrator. 

Instead of searching for ‘first edition’ or something of the sort, I have found better results by searching for ‘dust jackets’.  I’ll ask the seller additional questions if the auction description provides insufficient information to identify the item as a first edition.


Linda and Stan Zielinski, authors of the Children's Picturebook Price Guide, are "serious collectors having fun with fun books."

Links Are Our Friends

The information offered on the website and blog is offered free of charge. If you find the information useful, then kindly link or share the post with a parent, teacher, librarian, bookseller, or collector. Thank You.