
ALA Library Fact Sheet 23 - Recommended Reading
http://www.ala.org/ala/aboutala/offices/library/libraryfactsheet/alalibraryfactsheet23.cfm
Direct links to ALA's various reading lists and its lists of literary recognition and book award winners, sorted by age group.
Recommended Reading
ALA Library Fact Sheet 23
General Lists |
For Children |
For Young Adults/Teens |
For Adults |
Reference Books (for children, teens, and adults) | Reading Events, Programs, and Tips
Lists in the News
YALSA (Young Adult Library Services Association, a division of ALA) names 2009 Outstanding Books for the College Bound & Lifetime Learners List
Revised every five years, this list is intended as a tool for several audiences: students preparing for college, parents, educators and librarians. The 2009 list offers titles in five categories: Arts and Humanities, History and Cultures, Literature and Language Arts, Science and Technology and Social Sciences.
2009 Notable Books Selections Announced
A list of outstanding fiction, nonfiction, and poetry books for the adult reader. These titles have been selected for their significant contribution to the
expansion of knowledge and for the pleasure that they can provide.
American
Library Association announces literary award winners (Jan 2009)
The American Library Association list of award winning books, videos and audiobooks for children and young
adults - including the Caldecott, King, Newbery, Schneider Family, Printz, and Morris awards.
Booklist announces prestigious 2008
Top of the List selections (Jan 2009)
The editors of ALA's Booklist review journal select the single best title in eight categories -- adult fiction, adult
nonfiction, youth fiction, youth nonfiction, youth picture book, reference source, video/DVD, and audio.
Top
Ten Most Re-Read Books List
List of popular novels, plays, and poetry compiled for a news report by committee of
librarians and book review editors -- including Nancy Pearl.
General Lists (across two or more age groups)
-
ALA
Professional Tips Wiki: Selection. A list of online and print resources for
selecting books for a library collection.
-
2009 Alex Awards -
previous Alex Awards lists. ALA's Young Adult Library Services Association
(YALSA) spotlights ten books written for adults that have special appeal to young adults, ages 12 through 18.
The winning titles are selected from the previous year's publishing. The award is sponsored by the Margaret A. Edwards Trust and Booklist.
- 2009 Amelia Bloomer List - Amelia Bloomer Project. The list presents well-written and
well-illustrated books with strong feminist messages that affirm positive roles
for girls and women. The works are recommended for young people from birth
through eighteen years of age.
- Booklist
Editor's Choice: Books for Youth, 2008 (Jan 2009). Committed to providing
a broad selection of outstanding books that mixes popular appeal with literary
excellence, the Books for Youth editorial staff has chosen the titles as
best-of-the-year fiction, nonfiction, and picture books for children from
preschool through 12th grade.
- Rainbow List 2009 - Rainbow Project. Annual reading list of books for beginning readers through 12th grade that validate same-gender lifestyles, including portraying
GLBTQ (gay, lesbian, bisexual, transgendered or questioning) characters in a realistic and prominent manner.
- Schneider Award Select
Bibliography of Children’s Books about the Disability Experience. This list contains some outstanding books that portray
emotional, mental, or physical disability experiences, most published between
2000 and 2006. The grade level designations are intended as guidelines.
- University
Press Books Selected for Public and Secondary School Libraries. Compiled in consultation with ALA's
American Association of School Libraries and Public Library Association, this annual collection
development tools lets librarians know about the best and most appropriate books from publisher members of
AAUP, the Association of American University Presses.
For Children
- Notable
Children's Books - previous
Notable Children's Books lists. Each year a committee of the Association for Library
Service to Children (ALSC) identifies the best of the best in children's books.
This list includes the current year's Newbery, Caldecott, Belpré,
Sibert, Geisel, Printz, Batchelder and Coretta Scott King Award and Honor
books, as well as those that have been awarded the Schneider Family Book Award
and/or were named a Best Book for Young Adults.
-
(Mildred
L.) Batchelder Award - previous
Batchelder winners. The Batchelder Award is given to an American
publisher for a children's book considered to be the most outstanding of those
books originally published in a foreign language in a foreign country, and
subsequently translated into English and published in the United States.
-
(Pura)
Belpré Award – previous
Belpré winners. Established in 1996, this award is presented to a Latino/Latina writer and illustrator whose work best portrays, affirms, and
celebrates the Latino cultural experience in an outstanding work of literature for children and youth.
- Building
a Home Library. The ALA-Children’s Book Council (CBC) Joint Committee, with
cooperation from the Quicklists Consulting Committee of ALA's Association for Library Service to Children (ALSC, a division of ALA), created this list
to provide guidance to parents, grandparents, and others interested in
assembling a high-quality library for their children at home.
-
(Randolph)
Caldecott Medal – previous
Caldecott winners - Translated
Caldecott Titles. This award is given by the Association for Library Service
to Children, a division of the American Library Association, to the artist of
the most distinguished American picturebook for children.
-
Coretta
Scott King Book Awards – previous
King winners. Given to African American authors and illustrator for
outstanding inspirational and educational contributions, the Coretta Scott King
Book Award titles promote understanding and appreciation of the culture of all
peoples and their contribution to the realization of the American dream.
- Dealing with the Tragic
Events of September 11, 2001. Resources that were compiled to aid parents,
teachers and caregivers in discussing with children and teens the terrorist
attacks that took place in New York City, Washington, DC, and Pennsylvania on
Tuesday, September 11, 2001.
-
(Theodor
Seuss) Geisel Award – previous
Geisel winners. The Geisel Award is given annually to the author(s) and
illustrator(s) of the most distinguished American book for beginning
readers published in English in the United States.
- Great
Early Elementary Reads. The ALSC (Association for Library Service to Children, a division of ALA) 2007-2008 School-Age Programs and Services
Committee recommends these titles for children who are just learning to read
and beginning to read on their own. The books included were published between
2005 and 2008. However, many are part of a larger series that young readers
also will enjoy.
- Growing
Up Around the World. Books as Passports to Global Understanding for Children in the U.S. - Five Bibliographies by the ALSC
International Relations Committee.
- Hi-Lo Books for Upper Elementary Grades. The 2009 ALSC School-Age Programs and Services Committee recommends these titles to reluctant readers in grades 3-6.
-
(John)
Newbery Medal – previous
Newbery winners - Translated
Newbery Titles. This award is given annually by the Association for Library
Service to Children, a division of the American Library Association,
to the author of the most distinguished contribution to American literature for children.
- Resources for Children and Their Parents and Educators
Dealing with the Hurricane Katrina Tragedy. Compiled resources for children and their parents and educators
dealing with the Hurricane Katrina tragedy in September 2005 by the Quicklists Consulting Committee of ALA's Association
for Library Service to Children (ALSC, a division of ALA).
-
Schneider
Family Book Award – previous
Schneider winners. The Schneider Family Book Awards honor an author or
illustrator for a book that embodies an artistic expression of the disability
experience for child and adolescent audiences.
- (Robert
F.) Sibert Informational Book Medal – previous
Sibert winners. The Robert F. Sibert
Informational Book Award is awarded annually to the author(s)
and illustrator(s) of the most distinguished informational book
published in English during the preceding year. Information books are defined
as those written and illustrated to present, organize, and interpret
documentable, factual material for children.
-
(Laura
Ingalls) Wilder Award – previous
Wilder winners. The Wilder Award honors an author or illustrator whose
books, published in the United States, have made, over a period
of years, a substantial and lasting contribution to literature for children.
For Young Adults/Teens
-
2009 Best Books for Young Adults -
2009 Top Ten Best Books for Young Adults -
previous Best Books for
Young Adults lists. The list presents books that are recommended reading for young
adults 12 to 18. It is a general list of fiction and nonfiction titles selected
for their proven or potential appeal to the personal reading tastes of the young adult.
- 2009 Alex Awards -
previous Alex winners. The Alex Awards are given to ten books written for adults that have special
appeal to young adults, ages 12 through 18.
-
Booklist
Editors' Choice: Adult Books for Young Adults, 2008 (Jan 2009). Selected
by the Books for Youth editors, the following titles constitute the year’s best
personal reading for teenagers among adult books.
-
(Margaret
A.) Edwards Award -
previous Edwards winners.
The Margaret A. Edwards Award, honors an author, as well
as a specific body of his or her work, that have been popular over a period of time.
-
2009 Great Graphic Novels for Teens - 2009 Top Ten Great Graphic Novels for Teens - previous Great Graphic Novels for Teens lists. List of recommended graphic novels
and illustrated nonfiction for those aged 12-18. Updated yearly.
- In
Light of Hurricane Katrina. This list from ALA's Young Adult Library Services Association (YALSA, a division of ALA) features fiction and
nonfiction, was created to help librarians, educators and concerned adults
guide teens to books that may help them cope after Hurricane Katrina. There are
additional Dealing
with Tragedy and Terror and Helping Teens Cope lists.
-
2009 Outstanding Books for the College Bound and Lifelong Learners - previous Outstanding
Books for the College Bound and Lifelong Learners lists. The 2009 list is divided into five academic disciplines: arts and humanities, history and cultures, literature and language arts, science and technology, and social sciences. It is a combination of fiction, nonfiction, poetry, and drama. Titles were selected based on criteria including readability, racial and cultural diversity, balance of viewpoints, variety of formats and genres, and title availability. The previous 2004 list has similar sections, for history, humanities, literature and language arts, science and technology, and social sciences.
-
Popular
Paperbacks for Young Adults (all lists). A collection of lists by category, including
read a-likes for stories like Harry Potter, Gossip Girl and Chronicles of Narnia.
2009 themes: Death & Dying, Fame & Fortune, Journey>Destination, and Spies & Intrigue.
-
(Michael L.) Printz Award
for Excellence in Young Adult Literature – previous
Printz winners. This is an award for a book that exemplifies literary
excellence in young adult literature.
-
2009 Quick Picks for Reluctant Young Adult Readers - 2009 Top Ten Quick Picks - previous Quick
Picks for Reluctant Young Adult Readers lists. The list is for young adults (ages
12-18) who, for whatever reasons, do not like to read. The purpose of this list
is to identify titles for recreational reading, not for curricular or remedial
use.
-
Teens' Top Ten Books. Teens' Top Ten is
a "teen choice" list, where teens nominate and choose their favorite books of the previous
year during Teen Read Week.
For Adults
- 2009 Notable Books Selections Announced -
Notable
Books for Adults: The List for America's Readers. Since
1944, the goal of the Notable Books Council has been to make available to the
nation’s readers a list of 25 very good, very readable, and at times very
important fiction, nonfiction, and poetry books for the adult reader.
-
Booklist Editors' Choice: Adult Books, 2008 (Jan 2009). The Adult Books editors
have selected the following titles as representative of the year's outstanding
books for public-library collections. The editors’ choose books that combine
literary, intellectual, and aesthetic excellence with popular appeal.
-
W.Y. Boyd Literary Award recipient named (June 2009): Peace by Richard Bausch (Knopf) - W.Y. Boyd Literary Award for Excellence in Military Fiction. This is an award honoring the best fiction set in a period when the United States was at war. It recognizes the service of American veterans and military personnel and encourages the writing and publishing of outstanding war-related fiction for young adults or adults.
-
Winner of 2009 Sophie Brody Medal announced - (Sophie)
Brody Medal. This is an award for the U.S. author of the most distinguished
contribution to Jewish literature for adults.
-
Best genre fiction titles named to 2009 Reading List - The
Reading List: Honoring the Best Adult Genre Fiction. This list highlights outstanding genre fiction that merits special attention by
general adult readers and the librarians who work with them.
-
2009 Stonewall Book Award Winners announced at ALA’s 2009 Midwinter Meeting - Stonewall
Book Awards. The Stonewall Book Awards of the Gay, Lesbian, Bisexual and Transgendered Round Table of ALA are given annually
to English-language books of exceptional merit relating to
the gay, lesbian, bisexual, and transgendered experience.
Reference Books (for children, teens, and adults)
- ALA's Booklist magazine has several lists for reference books, which are updated yearly. Those most requested include:
-
Booklist
Editor's Choice: Reference
Sources (high school and up), 2008 (Jan 2009). Selected by the Reference Books Bulletin section of Booklist, these titles are the year's best
publications and databases for specific subjects, topics, and events.
-
Booklist
Twenty Best Bets for Student Researchers (K-12). An annual "Best Bets" list that
features new titles that have been reviewed in the past 12 months and that are targeted
specifically for students from the elementary through high school levels.
-
Dartmouth Medal. This medal honors the creation of a
reference work of outstanding quality and significance, including, but not limited to: writing, compiling, editing, or publishing
books or electronic information.
-
2009 Outstanding Reference Sources list released - Outstanding
Reference Sources. The Reference and User Services Association (RUSA, a division of ALA) recommends the most outstanding reference
publications for small and medium-sized
libraries. Updated yearly.
Reading Events, Programs, and Tips
-
Banned Books Week - Banned
Books Week: Celebrating the Freedom to Read, sponsored by ALA's Office for
Intellectual Freedom (OIF), is observed during the last week of
September each year. Since 1982, this annual ALA event reminds
Americans not to take this precious democratic freedom for granted.
- Born
to Read: How to Raise a Reader - The joy of sharing books is a gift you can
give children from the time they are born. Chanting nursery rhymes, singing
songs, and reading stories can comfort and entertain even the youngest child.
Listening to language lays the ground work for reading.
-
El día de los niños/El día de los libros (Children's Day/Book Day) - A celebration of
children, families, and reading held annually on April 30. The celebration
emphasizes the importance of literacy for children of all linguistic
and cultural backgrounds.
- National
Library Week - Observed ever year in April, this annual event
celebrates the contributions of our nation's libraries and librarians. All
types of libraries - school, public, academic and special - participate.
- Support Teen Literature Day - Established in 2007 by the Young Adult Library
Services Association (YALSA), a division of the American Library
Association, it's the Thursday of
each National Library Week.
- Teen Read Week - Teen
Read Week is a national literacy initiative of the Young Adult Library
Services Association (YALSA), a division of the American Library
Association. It's aimed at teens, their parents, librarians, educators,
booksellers and other concerned adults.
The ALA Online Store at http://www.alastore.ala.org
Supports the reading events and programs listed here -- Banned Books Week,
Born to Read,
National Library Week, Teen Read Week -- with the celebrated celebrity READ posters and matching bookmarks,
along with various other items, including banners, pens, and t-shirts.
Shortcut URL for this page: http://www.ala.org/readinglists
More reading lists for all ages can be found on the continuously updated list compiled by this office at the social bookmarking web site, delicious.com, at:
http://delicious.com/alalibrary/readinglists
and http://delicious.com/alalibrary/readinglists_picturebooks
See the other lists of recommendations compiled by ALA member committees -- ALA Recommended Listening: List of links to ALA's recommended music and spoken-word recordings and audiobooks for all ages, sorted by age group; ALA Recommended Viewing: List of links to ALA's recommended DVDs and videos for all ages, sorted by age group; and ALA Recommended Web Sites: List of links to ALA's recommended web sites for all ages, sorted by age group.
Last updated: October 2009
For more information on this or other fact sheets,
contact the ALA Library Reference Desk by telephone: 800-545-2433, extension 2153; fax: 312-280-3255;
e-mail: library@ala.org; or regular mail: ALA Library, American Library Association,
50 East Huron Street, Chicago, IL 60611.