Margaret Edwards Award


The Margaret A. Edwards Award is an American Library Association literary award that annually recognizes an author and "a specific body of his or her work, for significant and lasting contribution to young adult literature". It is named for Margaret A. Edwards, the pioneer, longtime director of young adult services at Enoch Pratt Free Library in Baltimore.
The award was inaugurated in 1988 as the biennial "School Library Journal Young Adult Author Award/Selected and Administered by the American Library Association's Young Adult Services Division". After 1990 it was renamed and made annual. It continues to be sponsored by School Library Journal and administered by the Young Adult Library Services Association, descendant of YASD. The winner is announced during the ALA midwinter meeting and the citation and $2000 cash prize are presented at a luncheon during the ALA annual conference.
Angela Johnson is the 29th Edwards Award winner, announced February 12, 2018.

History and criteria

The "young adult" class of books developed in library collections and publisher promotions, and young adult literature became a "respected field of study", in the second half of the twentieth century. When School Library Journal initiated the award for YA writers, the ALA awards program recognized the YA class only by annual lists of recommended books, the Best Books for Young Adults and a list "for the reluctant YA reader". Chief editor Lillian N. Gerhardt determined that SLJ should merely sponsor the award and recruited the ALA Young Adult Services Division to administer it.
The official name of the award approved in 1986 was unusually long even with initialisms, "The SLJ Young Adult Author Award/Selected and Administered by the ALA's YASD". In the 1988 and 1990 award citations as presented online decades later, it is called the "Young Adult Services Division/School Library Journal Author Achievement Award". During the third cycle it was made annual and renamed for the recently deceased Edwards.
As of the fourth cycle, 1991/1992, the committee was charged to select "a living author or co-author whose book or books, over a period of time, have been accepted by young people as an authentic voice that continues to illuminate their experiences and emotions, giving insight into their lives." Among other specific criteria, the body of work should have "acceptable literary quality" and be "currently popular with a wide range of young adults in the many different parts of the country". Furthermore, the winner must "agree to personally accept the award at the following Annual Conference", about five months after the selection.
SLJ editor Gerhardt covered the award at least once, in an editorial at the time of inaugural presentation to S. E. Hinton. For some time beginning 1990, the June issue of SLJ covered the current award and carried an interview with the preceding winner.

Winners

The award has been conferred 25 times in the 26 years through 2013. The honored writers have been natives and lifelong residents of the United States except Anne McCaffrey, Terry Pratchett, Susan Cooper, and Markus Zusak.
YearAuthorBody of work
2020Steve Sheinkin
The Port Chicago 50: Disaster, Mutiny, and the Fight for Civil Rights
The Notorious Benedict Arnold: A True Story of Adventure, Heroism, & Treachery
2019M.T. AndersonFeed
'
'
2018Toning the Sweep
Heaven
Looking for Red
The First Part Last
Bird
Sweet, Hereafter
2017Keeping the Moon
Dreamland
This Lullaby
The Truth About Forever
Just Listen
Along for the Ride
What Happened to Goodbye
2016Boy Meets Boy
The Realm of Possibility
Wide Awake
Nick and Norah’s Infinite Playlist
How They Met, and Other Stories
Love is the Higher Law
2015Tears of a Tiger
Forged by Fire
Darkness Before Dawn
Battle of Jericho
Copper Sun
November Blues
2014The Book Thief
Fighting Ruben Wolfe
Getting the Girl
I Am the Messenger
2013The Song of the Lioness
'
In the Hand of the Goddess
The Woman Who Rides Like a Man
Lioness Rampant
Protector of the Small
First Test
Page
Squire
Lady Knight
2012The Dark Is Rising Sequence
Over Sea, Under Stone
The Dark Is Rising
Greenwitch
The Grey King
Silver on the Tree
2011The Amazing Maurice and His Educated Rodents
The Wee Free Men
A Hat Full of Sky
Going Postal
The Colour of Magic
Guards! Guards!
Equal Rites
Mort
Small Gods
2010The Great Fire
'
The Long Road to GETTYSBURG
BLIZZARD! The Storm That Changed America
An American Plague: The True and Terrifying Story of the Yellow Fever Epidemic of 1793
2009Speak
Fever, 1793
Catalyst
2008Ender's Game
Ender's Shadow
2007The Giver
2006I Hadn't Meant to Tell You This
From the Notebooks of Melanin Sun
If You Come Softly
Lena
Miracle's Boys
2005Weetzie Bat
Witch Baby
Cherokee Bat and the Goat Guys
Missing Angel Juan
Baby Be-Bop
2004A Wizard of Earthsea
The Left Hand of Darkness
The Tombs of Atuan
The Farthest Shore
The Beginning Place
Tehanu
2003Annie on My Mind
2002The Effect of Gamma Rays on Man-in-the-Moon Marigolds: A Drama in Two Acts
The Pigman
My Darling, My Hamburger
The Pigman's Legacy
The Pigman & Me
2001The Contender
The Brave
The Chief
One Fat Summer
2000Running Loose
Stotan!
The Crazy Horse Electric Game
Chinese Handcuffs

Staying Fat for Sarah Byrnes
1999Dragonflight
The Ship Who Sang
Dragonquest
Dragonsong
Dragonsinger
The White Dragon
Dragondrums
1998Meet the Austins
A Wrinkle In Time
A Swiftly Tilting Planet
A Ring of Endless Light
1997Dancing Carl
Hatchet
The Crossing
The Winter Room
Canyons
Woodsong
1996Forever
1995Homecoming
Dicey's Song
A Solitary Blue
Building Blocks
The Runner
Jackaroo
Izzy, Willy-Nilly
1994Hoops
Motown and Didi
Fallen Angels
Scorpions
1993Dinky Hocker Shoots Smack!
Gentlehands
Me Me Me Me Me: Not a Novel
Night Kites
1992
1991The Chocolate War
I Am the Cheese
After the First Death
1990Are You in the House Alone?
The Ghost Belonged to Me
Ghosts I Have Been
Father Figure
Secrets of the Shopping Mall
Remembering the Good Times
1989
1988The Outsiders
That Was Then This Is Now
Tex
Rumble Fish

Multiple awards

No one has won both the Edwards Award and the Laura Ingalls Wilder Medal, which the ALA children's division awards for "substantial and lasting contributions to children's literature".
Four Edwards winners have been selected by ALSC to deliver its annual May Hill Arbuthnot Lecture: Susan Cooper in 2001, Ursula K. Le Guin in 2004, Walter Dean Myers in 2009, and Lois Lowry in 2011. ALSC considers the Arbuthnot selection, inaugurated in 1970, another career award for contribution to children's literature. The lecturer prepares and delivers —currently about 16 months after selection— "a paper considered to be a significant contribution to the field of children's literature", which is also published in the ALSC journal.