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justice_turtle ([personal profile] justice_turtle) wrote in [community profile] readallthenewberys2013-06-13 11:37 pm

The 1923-1925 Newberys Summary Post

The 1923 and 1924 Newberys had no Honor Books, so I'm going to lump them together, and 1925 - which had two Honor Books - as well.

(I really wish the history of the deliberations was public, you know? Or made public after a certain time, like census records are, when the particular award had ceased to be CURRENT DRAMA. I know that for the first year any librarian could make a nomination and anything nominated got onto the list, after which they switched to a committee format; but it's only a guess that for the next two years the committee worked on a "pick only one book" plan, till 1925 changed their minds somehow.)

1923

* 1923's Newbery Medalist was The Voyages of Doctor Dolittle by Hugh Lofting. I gave it four of five stars. It's the second in the Dr Dolittle series, which (for today's lucky ten thousand) is about a medical doctor who learns to speak animal languages and becomes the world's best veterinarian; this volume introduces Dolittle's young assistant, Tommy Stubbins. I was most struck by the naturalistic narrative voice - Tommy narrates the book, and sounds very much like a real nine-year-old boy - and by the amount of ecological activism that got in without slowing down the book.

I docked it one star for a rather long colonialist segment around the two-thirds mark, plus a couple of n-bombs and some rude antifeminist sentiment from a sympathetic character. Still, I think it was well worthy of the Newbery Medal.

1924

* 1924's Newbery Medalist, on the other hand, was The Dark Frigate by Charles Boardman Hawes, to which I gave two of five stars. It's the story of a young man who falls in with bad company in England and winds up joining a band of pirates. I was most struck by the utter lack of foreshadowing or sense-making in anything ever. (I feel I should be nicer to CBH, since he died suddenly before learning he'd won the Newbery Medal. But his writing is so bad.)

I gave this book two stars because, unlike The Great Quest, it had only a couple of brief racist moments and it began to have the glimmerings of a plot... which is another way of saying, because I'd feel bad if I was giving three-quarters of the Newberys zero stars. ;P But in my opinion it did not deserve the Newbery.

Does anyone know of any other children's books published in America in 1923? Wiki knows nothing. :P

1925

* I gave The Dream Coach by Anne and Dillwyn Parrish (read it free at that link) four of five stars. It's a collection of four short stories about young children of different backgrounds having various dreams. I was most struck by the light, very Hans-Christian-Andersen-esque tone of the writing, and I mean that in the best possible way.

I docked it one star for including an awkwardly racist story about a "Little Chinese Emperor", and some clumsily exoticized black slaves in another story's European-style fairytale kingdom. But the remaining two stories were so excellent that I still think The Dream Coach should have received the 1925 Newbery Medal. (If I were a painter, I'd turn the fourth story into a lavishly illustrated picture book and seek a publisher. It's so, so, so amazingly good, in its old-fashioned way.)

* Nicholas: A Manhattan Christmas Story by Annie Carroll Moore got two of five stars even though I couldn't finish it. It's the somewhat perplexing story of an eight-inch-tall live Dutch doll named Nicholas who visits a fantasy version of 1920s New York City. I was most struck by how really awesome it could have been if it had had more atmospheric descriptions of its settings instead of being a glorified tour-guide.

I gave it two stars for trying, but it was clearly never intended to go beyond its own place and time, so I don't think it belonged on the Newbery list.

* Tales from Silver Lands by Charles Joseph Finger was the 1925 Newbery Medalist. I gave it one of five stars. It's a collection of retold South American folktales the author collected on his travels as a young man, which sounds so much cooler than it actually is. :P I was most struck by the way Mr Finger came across as this horribly snotty colonialist jerk every time he wrote about how he heard a particular story.

I gave it one star "for not being The Old Tobacco Shop", which was about all it deserved. ;P In my opinion, it shouldn't have been on the Newbery list at all, let alone have won, let alone still be IN PRINT (unlike The Dream Coach, whose copyright lapsed long ago).