Phoenix Award


The Phoenix Award annually recognizes one English-language children's book published twenty years earlier that did not then win a major literary award. It is named for the mythical bird phoenix that is reborn from its own ashes, signifying the book's rise from relative obscurity.
The award was established and is conferred by the Children's Literature Association, a nonprofit organization based in the United States whose mission is to advance "the serious study of children's literature". The winner is selected by an elected committee of five ChLA members, from nominations by members and outsiders. The token is a brass statue.
The inaugural, 1985 Phoenix Award recognized The Mark of the Horse Lord by Rosemary Sutcliff. Beginning 1989, as many as two runners-up have been designated "Honor Books", with 34 named for the 29 years to 2017.
A parallel award for children's picture books, the Phoenix Picture Book Award was approved in 2010 and inaugurated in 2013. There are two awards if the writer and illustrator are different people. "Books are considered not only for the quality of their illustrations, but for the way pictures and text work together to tell a story. Wordless books are judged on the ability of the pictures alone to convey a story."

Latest rendition

The 33rd annual Phoenix Award and fifth Phoenix Picture Book Award were presented on June 24 2017 at the ChLA Annual Conference hosted by the University of South Florida in Tampa, Florida. The 2018 Phoenix Award winner has also been announced. The awards are included in the tables below.

Phoenix Award winners

There have been 35 Award winners and 35 Honor Books announced since 1985.
YearWinnerHonor Books
2020Carolyn Coman, Many StonesWalter Dean Myers, '
2019Louise Erdrich, The Birchbark HouseConnie Porter, Imani All Mine
2018Elizabeth Partridge, '
2017James Heneghan, Wish Me LuckPaul Fleischman, Seedfolks
Naomi Shihab Nye, Habibi
2016Andrew Clements, Frindle
2015Kyoko Mori, One Bird
2014Gary Soto, JesseGraham Salisbury, Under the Blood Red Sun
2013Gaye Hiçyilmaz, The Frozen WaterfallWalter Dean Myers, '
2012‡Karen Hesse, Letters from RifkaMichael Dorris, Morning Girl
Frances Temple, '
2011‡Virginia Euwer Wolff, The Mozart SeasonMary Downing Hahn, Stepping on the Cracks
Eloise McGraw, The Striped Ships
2010Rosemary Sutcliff, The Shining Company
2009Francesca Lia Block, Weetzie BatSylvia Cassedy, Lucie Babbidge’s House
2008‡Peter Dickinson, EvaJane Yolen, The Devil's Arithmetic
2007Margaret Mahy, MemorySheila Gordon, Waiting for the Rain
2006Diana Wynne Jones, Howl's Moving CastleMargaret Mahy, The Tricksters
Philip Pullman, The Shadow in the Plate
2005Margaret Mahy, The Catalogue of the UniverseDiana Wynne Jones, Fire and Hemlock
2004‡Berlie Doherty, White Peak FarmBrian Doyle, Angel Square
2003Ivan Southall, The Long Night WatchCynthia Voigt, A Solitary Blue
2002‡Zibby Oneal, A Formal FeelingClayton Bess, Story for a Black Night
2001‡Peter Dickinson, The Seventh RavenKathryn Lasky, The Night Journey
2000‡Monica Hughes, Keeper of the Isis LightJane Langton, The Fledgling
1999E.L. Konigsburg, Throwing ShadowsRosa Guy, The Disappearance
Ouida Sebestyen, Words by Heart
1998Jill Paton Walsh, A Chance ChildRobin McKinley, Beauty
Doris Orgel, The Devil in Vienna
1997Robert Cormier, I Am the Cheese
1996Alan Garner, The Stone BookWilliam Steig, Abel's Island
1995Laurence Yep, DragonwingsNatalie Babbitt, Tuck Everlasting
1994Katherine Paterson, Of Nightingales That WeepJames Lincoln Collier and Christopher Collier, My Brother Sam is Dead
Sharon Bell Mathis, Listen for the Fig Tree
1993Nina Bawden, Carrie's WarE.L. Konigsburg, A Proud Taste for Scarlet and Miniver
1992Mollie Hunter, A Sound of Chariots
1991Jane Gardam, A Long Way from VeronaWilliam Mayne, A Game of Dark
Ursula K. Le Guin, The Tombs of Atuan
1990Sylvia Engdahl, Enchantress from the StarsWilliam Mayne, Ravensgill
Scott O'Dell, Sing Down the Moon
1989Helen Cresswell, The Night WatchmenMilton Meltzer, Brother Can You Spare a Dime?
Adrienne Richard, Pistol
1988Erik Christian Haugaard, The Rider and his Horse Honor books were instituted in 1989.
1987Leon Garfield, Smith
1986Robert J. Burch, Queenie Peavy
1985Rosemary Sutcliff, The Mark of the Horse Lord-

Multiple awards

Three writers each won two of the 31 Phoenix Awards through 2017.
Mahy of New Zealand was also a runner up in 2006.
Several of the winners have also received the British Carnegie Medal for other books: Sutcliff ; Garner ; Garfield ; Southall ; Hunter ; Dickinson ; Mahy ; Doherty.
Three of the winners have also won the American Newbery Medal for other books: Konigsburg ; Paterson ; Hesse.

Picture Book Award winners

There were five Phoenix Picture Book Award winners and seven Honor Books named for 2013 through 2017.
The writer is listed first, the illustrator second if distinct.
YearWinnerHonor Books
2019Christopher Myers, Black CatAmy Littlesuger and Floyd Cooper Tree of Hope
2018Robert D. San Souci and Brian Pinkney, 'Jacqueline Preiss Weitzman and Robin Preiss Glasser, You Can’t Take A Balloon Into the Metropolitan Museum
2017Mary McKenna Siddals and Petra Mathers, Tell Me a SeasonDemi, One Grain of Rice: A Mathematical Tale
2016Molly Bang, GooseJulius Lester and Jerry Pinkney, '
2015 Sara Fanelli, My Map Book Charlotte Zolotow and Stefano Vitale, When the Wind Stops

Kady MacDonald Denton, Would They Love a Lion?
2014Raymond Briggs, The BearPeggy Rathmann, Good Night, Gorilla
Anne Isaacs and Paul O. Zelinsky, Swamp Angel
2013Kevin Henkes, OwenDenise Fleming, In the Small, Small Pond