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CLA Book of the Year for Children Award : ウィキペディア英語版
Canadian Library Association Book of the Year for Children Award
The Canadian Library Association Book of the Year for Children Award is a literary award that annually recognizes one Canadian children's book. The book must be written in English and published in Canada during the preceding year (and nominated by the end of November). The writer must be a citizen or permanent resident of Canada.〔
The Book of the Year for Children Award is administered and presented by the Canadian Library Association/Association canadienne des bibliothèques (CLA).〔 It was inaugurated in 1947 by an award to Roderick Haig-Brown for ''Starbuck Valley Winter'' and it has been presented to one book every year without exception from 1963.〔
The companion CLA Young Adult Book Award has been presented annually from 1981.〔 As of 2015, two Book of the Year for Children criteria are "appeal to children up to and including age 12" and "creative (i.e., original) writing (i.e., fiction, poetry, narrative, non-fiction, retelling of traditional literature)".〔 Corresponding criteria for the YA Book Award are "() to young adults between the ages of 13 and 18" and "fiction (novel, collection of short stories, or graphic novel)".〔 Two books have won both the children's and young-adult awards (below).
== Winners ==

There were two awards in 1966 and no award six times from 1948 to 1962.〔 From 1967, the award-winning books were published during the preceding year; to 1965, most of the winning books were published during the second preceding year; the 1966 winners were published one each in 1964 and 1965.
* 2015 – Jonathan Auxier, ''The Night Gardener'' (Penguin Canada)
* 2014 – Allan Stratton, ''The Curse of the Dream Witch'' (Scholastic Canada)
* 2013 – Susin Nielsen, ''The Reluctant Journal of Henry K. Larsen'' (Tundra Books)
* 2012 – Kit Pearson, ''The Whole Truth'' (HarperCollins Canada)
* 2011 – Kenneth Oppel, ''Half Brother'' (HarperCollins)
* 2010 – Nancy Hartry, ''Watching Jimmy'' (Tundra)
* 2009 – Anne Laurel Carter, ''The Shepherd's Granddaughter'' (Groundwood Books)
* 2008 – Christopher Paul Curtis, ''Elijah of Buxton'' (Scholastic)
* 2007 – Hadley Dyer, ''Johnny Kellock Died Today'' (Harper Collins)
* 2006 – Pamela Porter, ''The Crazy Man'' (Groundwood)
* 2005 – Anne Laurel Carter, ''Last Chance Bay'' (Penguin)
* 2004 – Brian Doyle, ''Boy O'Boy'' (Groundwood/Douglas McIntyre)
* 2003 – Karen Levine, ''Hana's Suitcase: a true story'' (Second Story Press)
* 2002 – Jean Little, ''Orphan at My Door: the home child diary of Victoria Cope'' (Scholastic Canada)
* 2001 – Nan Gregory, ''Wild Girl & Gran'' (Red Deer Press)
* 2000 – Kenneth Oppel, ''Sunwing'' (Harper Collins)
* 1999 – Tim Wynne-Jones, ''Stephen Fair'' (Groundwood/Douglas McIntyre)
* 1998 – Kenneth Oppel, ''Silverwing'' (Harper Collins)
* 1997 – Brian Doyle, ''Uncle Ronald'' (Groundwood)
* 1996 – Maxine Trottier, ''The Tiny Kite of Eddie Wing'' (Stoddart)
* 1995 – Cora Taylor, ''Summer of the Mad Monk''
* 1994 – Tim Wynne-Jones, ''Some of the Kinder Planets''
* 1993 – Celia Barker Lottridge, ''Ticket to Curlew''; also issued as ''Ticket to Canada''
* 1992 – Kevin Major, ''Eating Between the Lines''
* 1991 – Michael Bedard, ''Redwork''
* 1990 – Kit Pearson, ''The Sky is Falling''
* 1989 – Brian Doyle, ''Easy Avenue''
* 1988 – Kit Pearson, ''A Handful of Time''
* 1987 – Janet Lunn, ''Shadow in Hawthorn Bay''
* 1986 – Cora Taylor, ''Julie''
* 1985 – Jean Little, ''Mama's Going to Buy You a Mockingbird''
* 1984 – Jan Hudson, ''Sweetgrass''
* 1983 – Brian Doyle, ''Up to Low''
* 1982 – Janet Lunn, ''The Root Cellar''
* 1981 – Donn Kushner, ''The Violin-Maker's Gift''
* 1980 – James Archibald Houston, ''River Runners''
* 1979 – Kevin Major, ''Hold Fast''
* 1978 – Dennis Lee, ''Garbage Delight''
* 1977 – Christie Harris, ''Mouse Woman and the Vanished Princesses''
* 1976 – Mordecai Richler, ''Jacob Two-Two Meets the Hooded Fang''
* 1975 – Dennis Lee, ''Alligator Pie''
* 1974 – Elizabeth Cleaver, ''The Miraculous Hind: a Hungarian legend''
* 1973 – Ruth Nichols, ''The Marrow of the World''
* 1972 – Ann Blades, ''Mary of Mile 18''
* 1971 – William Toye, ''Cartier Discovers the St. Lawrence''
* 1970 – Edith Fowke, ''Sally Go Round the Sun: 300 songs, rhymes, and games of Canadian children''
* 1969 – Kay Hill, ''And Tomorrow the Stars''
* 1968 – James Archibald Houston, ''The White Archer: an Eskimo Legend''
* 1967 – Christie Harris, ''Raven's Cry''
* 1966 – James McNeill, ''The Double Knights: More Tales from Round the World'' (1964)
* 1966 – James Archibald Houston, ''Tikta'liktak: an Eskimo Legend'' (1965)
* 1965 – Dorothy M. Reid, ''Tales of Nanabozho''
* 1964 – Roderick Haig-Brown, ''The Whale People''
* 1963 – Sheila Burnford, ''The Incredible Journey''
* 1962 – no award
* 1961 – William Toye, ''The St. Lawrence''
* 1960 – Maruis Barbeau and Michael Hornyansky, ''The Golden Phoenix and Other Fairy Tales from Quebec'' (also catalogued as "... ''Other French-Canadian Fairy Tales''", )
* 1959 – John F. Hayes, ''The Dangerous Cove: a story of the early days in Newfoundland''
* 1958 – Farley Mowat, ''Lost in the Barrens''
* 1957 – Cyrus Macmillan, ''Glooskap's Country and Other Indian Tales'' (posthumous reissue)
* 1956 – Louise Riley, ''Train for Tiger Lily''
* 1955 – no award
* 1954 – no award
* 1953 – no award
* 1952 – Catherine Anthony Clark, ''The Sun Horse''
* 1951 – no award
* 1950 – Richard S. Lambert, ''Franklin of the Arctic: a life of adventure''
* 1949 – no award
* 1948 – Mabel Dunham, ''Kristli's Trees''
* 1947 – Roderick Haig-Brown, ''Starbuck Valley Winter'' (1943)

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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