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( Five Things About Ava Andrews, a book for children 10 and up by Margaret Dilloway, won a 2021 Christopher Award.)
(Margaret Dilloway whose book Five Things About Ava Andrews won a 2021 Christopher Award.)
San Diego-based author Margaret Dilloway was honored with a Christopher Award for Five Things About Ava Andrews (Ages 10 and up, Balzer + Bray/Harper Collins). It is one of 12 books for adults and young people by 17 authors and illustrators recognized as the Awards mark their 72nd year. The authors join creators of 10 winning TV/cable and feature films.
In the book a shy, anxious 11-year-old with a heart condition moves beyond her awkwardness to become a social activist after signing up for improv classes. The author is the descendent of samurai and coal miners and the proud owner of an ICD/pacemaker. She frequently writes about the intersections of race, culture, and invisible disabilities.
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(Jessica Goudeau who won a Christopher Award for After the Last Border. )
Austin-based author Jessica Goudeau received a Christopher Award for After the Last Border: Two Families and the Story of Refuge in America (Viking/Penguin Random House). It is one of 12 books for adults and young people by 17 authors and illustrators honored as the Awards mark their 72nd year. The authors join creators of 10 winning TV/Cable and feature films.
Goudeau chronicles the lives of two refugees Mu Naw a Christian from Myanmar and Hasna, a Muslim from Syria who escape violence and persecution in their homelands to resettle in Austin, hoping to build a better life with their families.
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(David Davis, author of Wheels of Courage, won a 2021 Christopher Award.)
Los Angeles-based author David Davis received a Christopher Award for Wheels of Courage: How Paralyzed Veterans from World War II Invented Wheelchair Sports, Fought for Disability Rights, and Inspired a Nation (Center Street/Hachette Book Group). It is one of 12 books for adults and young people by 17 authors and illustrators honored as the Awards mark their 72nd year. The authors join creators of 10 winning TV/Cable and feature films.
Davis recounted the time when paraplegics injured in World War II were considered lost causes. Nevertheless doctors and determined veterans invented innovative wheelchair sports, created medical advances, and fought for disability rights.