This Is MY Fort! and What Is Inside THIS Box? receive Gryphon Award

2020 Gryphon Book Award

This Is MY Fort! and What Is Inside THIS Box?, written by Drew Daywalt and illustrated by Olivier Tallec, and published by Scholastic Press, are the winners of the 2020 Gryphon Award for Children's Literature.

The Gryphon Award, which includes a $1,000 prize, is given annually by The Center for Children's Books (CCB). This year's committee was chaired by Clinical Assistant Professor Deborah Stevenson and Kate Quealy-Gainer, assistant editor of The Bulletin of the Center for Children's Books.

The prize is awarded to the author of an outstanding English language work of fiction or nonfiction for which the primary audience is children in kindergarten through fourth grade, and which best exemplifies those qualities that successfully bridge the gap in difficulty between books for reading aloud to children and books for practiced readers. With a core of regular committee members, the award has become a way to contribute to an ongoing conversation about literature for inexperienced readers and to draw attention to the literature that offers, in many different ways, originality, accessibility, and high quality for that audience.

"Who knew you could make brilliant early readers from philosophy and quantum theory?" said Stevenson. "Drew Daywalt, that's who. He and artist Olivier Tallec take the familiar beginning-reader odd couple (in this case, a lively monkey and a—no lie—slice of cake) to new places such as Schrödinger's cat and set theory. The books are witty and ingenious in cutting directly to the concepts via the controlled vocabulary in ways that kids will immediately grasp, making the titles entertaining brain teasers as well as satisfying novice reads. Tallec's playful, elastic figures have a theatrical dash as they grapple with the question of fort possession and the visibility of cats in closed boxes."

Three Gryphon Honors also were named:

  • The Very Impatient Caterpillar (Scholastic) written and illustrated by Ross Burach, is a highly readable (and slyly scientific) early reader; the charmingly goofy protagonist, a young caterpillar exasperated by metamorphosis, will keep kids laughing, while the speech-bubbles and controlled vocabulary will support their own reading transformation.
  • ¡Vamos!: Let's Go to the Market! (Houghton Mifflin Harcourt) written and illustrated by Raúl the Third, follows Lobo and Bernabé as they make their deliveries through the hustle and bustle of the mercado; the stylized artwork, featuring plenty of opportunities for novice readers to flex their skills in both English and Spanish, make this an absolute gem.
  • Lion of the Sky: Haiku for All Seasons (Millbrook) written by Laura Purdie Salas and illustrated by Mercè López, offers a unique take on the haiku format in Salas’ "riddle-ku" poems; coupled with López’s evocative illustrations, this offers readers a chance to hone their literacy skills and their riddle-solving chops.

The Gryphon Award was established in 2004 as a way to focus attention on transitional reading. "Each year, new books redefine and remake this important genre," Stevenson said, "and we're grateful for our opportunity to celebrate and identify books that reward youngsters when they're in that crucial early stage of developing their relationship with reading."

The award is sponsored by the CCB and funded by the CCB's Gryphon Fund. Income from the fund supports the annual Gryphon Lecture as well as the Gryphon Award for children's literature.