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Wikipedia

Kate Greenaway Medal

The Carnegie Medal for Illustration (until 2022, the Kate Greenaway Medal) is a British award that annually recognises "distinguished illustration in a book for children". It is conferred upon the illustrator by the Chartered Institute of Library and Information Professionals (CILIP)[1] which inherited it from the Library Association. CILIP is currently partnered with the audio technology company Yoto in connection with the award, though their sponsorship and the removal of Greenaway’s name from the medal proved controversial.[2]

The Medal is named after the 19th-century English illustrator of children's books Kate Greenaway (1846–1901).[1] It was established in 1955 and inaugurated next year for 1955 publications, but no work was considered suitable.[3] The first Medal was awarded in 1957 to Edward Ardizzone for Tim All Alone (Oxford, 1956), which he also wrote. That first Medal was dated 1956. Since 2007 the Medal has been dated by its presentation during the year following publication. This medal is a companion to the Carnegie Medal which recognises one outstanding work of writing for children and young adults (conferred upon the author).[4]

Nominated books must be first published in the U.K. during the preceding school year (September to August), with English-language text if any.[5]

The award by CILIP is a gold Medal and £500 worth of books donated to the illustrator's chosen library. Since 2000 there is also a £5000 cash prize from a bequest by the children's book collector Colin Mears.[1]

Rules edit

Library and information professionals (CILIP) nominate books in September and October, after the close of the publication year.[6] A panel of 12 children's librarians in CILIP's youth interest group (YLG) judges both the Carnegie and Greenaway books. Currently the shortlist is announced in March and the winner in June, between nine and 21 months after first U.K. publication.[6]

Candidates must be published in the U.K. during the preceding year (September to August). They must be published for young people, and published in the U.K. originally or within three months in case of co-publication. English must be the language of any text, or one of dual languages.[5]

"All categories of illustrated books for children and young people are eligible."[5]

CILIP specifies numerous points of artistic style, format, and visual experience, and also "synergy of illustration and text" that should be considered "where applicable". Furthermore, "The whole work should provide pleasure from a stimulating and satisfying visual experience which leaves a lasting impression. Illustrated work needs to be considered primarily in terms of its graphic elements, and where text exists particular attention should be paid to the synergy between the two."[5]

Winners edit

Through 2023 there have been 67 Medals awarded in 68 years, covering 1955 to 2022 publications approximately. No eligible book published in 1955 or 1958 was considered suitable.[3]

From 2007 the medals are dated by the year of presentation; previously by the calendar year of British publication, which then defined the eligible works.[3]

  = named to the 50th Anniversary Top Ten in 2007.[7][8]

Medal winners[3][9]
Date Illustrator Title Author (if different) Publisher
2023 Jeet Zdung Saving Sorya: Chang and the Sun Bear Trang Nguyen Kingfisher
2022 Danica Novgorodoff Long Way Down Jason Reynolds Faber & Faber
2021 Sydney Smith Small in the City Walker Books
2020 Shaun Tan Tales from the Inner City Walker Books
2019 Jackie Morris The Lost Words Robert Macfarlane Hamish Hamilton
2018 Sydney Smith Town is by the Sea Joanne Schwartz Walker Books
2017 Lane Smith There is a Tribe of Kids Two Hoots
2016 Chris Riddell The Sleeper and the Spindle Neil Gaiman Bloomsbury
2015 William Grill Shackleton's Journey Flying Eye Books
2014 Jon Klassen This Is Not My Hat Walker Books
2013 Levi Pinfold Black Dog Templar
2012 Jim Kay A Monster Calls Patrick Ness Walker Books
2011 Grahame Baker-Smith FArTHER Templar
2010 Freya Blackwood Harry and Hopper Margaret Wild Scholastic
2009 Catherine Rayner Harris Finds His Feet Little Tiger
2008 Emily Gravett Little Mouse's Big Book of Fears Pan Macmillan
2007 Mini Grey The Adventures of the Dish and the Spoon Jonathan Cape
2006. The award date is the year of publication before 2006, the year of presentation after 2006.
2005 Emily Gravett Wolves PanMacmillan
2004 Chris Riddell Jonathan Swift's "Gulliver" Jonathan Swift (1726) adapted Walker Books
2003 Shirley Hughes Ella's Big Chance — (Cinderella adapted) Bodley Head
2002 Bob Graham Jethro Byrde, Fairy Child Walker Books
2001 Chris Riddell Pirate Diary: The Journal of Jake Carpenter Richard Platt (informational) Walker Books
2000 Lauren Child I Will Never Not Ever Eat a Tomato Orchard Books
1999 Helen Oxenbury Alice's Adventures in Wonderland Lewis Carroll (1865) Walker Books
1998 Helen Cooper Pumpkin Soup Doubleday
1997 P. J. Lynch When Jessie Came Across the Sea Amy Hest Walker Books
1996 Helen Cooper The Baby Who Wouldn't Go To Bed Doubleday
1995 P. J. Lynch The Christmas Miracle of Jonathan Toomey Susan Wojciechowski Walker Books
1994 Gregory Rogers Way Home Libby Hathorn Andersen
1993 Alan Lee Black Ships Before Troy Rosemary Sutcliff Frances Lincoln
1992 Anthony Browne Zoo Julia MacRae
1991 Janet Ahlberg The Jolly Christmas Postman Allan Ahlberg Heinemann
1990 Gary Blythe The Whales' Song Dyan Sheldon Hutchinson
1989 Michael Foreman War Boy: A Country Childhood — (autobiographical) Pavilion
1988 Barbara Firth Can't You Sleep Little Bear? Martin Waddell Walker Books
1987 Adrienne Kennaway Crafty Chameleon Mwenye Hadithi Hodder & Stoughton
1986 Fiona French Snow White in New York Oxford
1985 Juan Wijngaard Sir Gawain and the Loathly Lady retold by
Selina Hastings
Walker Books
1984 Errol Le Cain Hiawatha's Childhood Longfellow (1855) Faber
1983 Anthony Browne Gorilla Julia MacRae
1982 Michael Foreman Long Neck and Thunder Foot (and)
Sleeping Beauty and other favourite fairy tales
Helen Piers (and)

traditional

Kestrel;

Gollancz

1981 Charles Keeping The Highwayman Alfred Noyes (1906) Oxford
1980 Quentin Blake Mr Magnolia Jonathan Cape
1979 Jan Pieńkowski Haunted House Heinemann
1978 Janet Ahlberg Each Peach Pear Plum Allan Ahlberg Kestrel
1977 Shirley Hughes Dogger Bodley Head
1976 Gail E. Haley The Post Office Cat Bodley Head
1975 Victor Ambrus Horses in Battle (and)
Mishka
— (nonfiction)
Oxford;

Oxford

1974 Pat Hutchins The Wind Blew — (informational) Bodley Head
1973 Raymond Briggs Father Christmas Hamish Hamilton
1972 Krystyna Turska The Woodcutter's Duck Hamish Hamilton
1971 Jan Pieńkowski The Kingdom Under the Sea and other stories retold by Joan Aiken Jonathan Cape
1970 John Burningham Mr Gumpy's Outing Jonathan Cape
1969 Helen Oxenbury The Quangle Wangle's Hat (and)
The Dragon of an Ordinary Family
Edward Lear (unknown);
Margaret Mahy (1969)
Heinemann, Franklin Watts; Heinemann
1968 Pauline Baynes A Dictionary of Chivalry Grant Uden (reference) Longman
1967 Charles Keeping Charley, Charlotte and the Golden Canary Oxford
1966 Raymond Briggs Mother Goose Treasury traditional Hamish Hamilton
1965 Victor Ambrus The Three Poor Tailors Oxford, Hamish Hamilton
1964 C. Walter Hodges Shakespeare's Theatre — (nonfiction) Oxford
1963 John Burningham Borka: The Adventures of a Goose With No Feathers Jonathan Cape
1962 Brian Wildsmith ABC (also Brian Wildsmith's ABC) — (no text) Oxford
1961 Antony Maitland Mrs Cockle's Cat Philippa Pearce Constable,Longman
1960 Gerald Rose Old Winkle and the Seagulls Elizabeth Rose Faber
1959 William Stobbs Kashtanka (and)
A Bundle of Ballads
Anton Chekhov (1887);
Ruth Manning-Sanders from the Child Ballads
Oxford;

Oxford

1958 (Prize withheld as no book considered suitable)
1957 V. H. Drummond Mrs Easter and the Storks Faber
1956 Edward Ardizzone Tim All Alone Oxford
1955 (Prize withheld as no book considered suitable)

Winners of multiple awards edit

Only one illustrator, Chris Riddell, has won three Medals. Fourteen other illustrators have won two of the 64 Medals awarded through 2021. The first winner of two Medals was John Burningham, 1963 and 1970. The most recent is Sydney Smith in 2018 and 2021.

Only A Monster Calls (Walker Books, 2011), by Patrick Ness and Jim Kay, has won both the Carnegie and Greenaway Medals for writing and illustration (2012).

In 2014, This is Not My Hat by Jon Klassen won both the Greenaway Medal and the American Caldecott Medal, which recognises a picture book illustrated by a U.S. citizen or resident. This is the first time the same book has won both medals.[10] The recently common practice of co-publication makes a double win possible. Indeed, This Is Not My Hat was released in Britain and America on the same day, 9 October 2012, by Walker Books and its American subsidiary Candlewick Press.[11][12]

Gail E. Haley was the first illustrator to win both medals, albeit for different works: the 1971 Caldecott for A Story a Story (1970) and the 1976 Greenaway for The Post Office Cat. She also wrote both books.

Helen Oxenbury, who won the 1969 and 1999 medals, was also a "Highly Commended" runner-up four times from 1989 to 1994; the distinction was used 31 times in 29 years to 2002 and no other illustrator was highly commended more than twice.[13] Michael Foreman, who won the 1982 and 1989 medals, was highly commended once and four times a "Commended" runner-up, a distinction used 68 times in 44 years to 2002.[13]

Walker Books, based in London, with American subsidiary Candlewick Press in Somerville, MA, has published 10 of the 30 Greenaway Medal-winning works from 1985 to 2014.[10]

50-year Greenaway of Greenaways (2007) edit

For the 50th medal anniversary,[a] CILIP posted online information about all of the winning works (1955–2005) and conducted a poll to identify the nation's favourite Kate Greenaway Medalist. The public were invited to send in their nominations between 16 October and 1 December 2006.[14] Polling was subsequently opened between 20 April and 14 June 2007 for ten shortlisted titles determined by a panel and the winner was announced on 21 June 2007 at the British Library.[15][16] By less than one percentage point Dogger, illustrated and written by Shirley Hughes (1977), outpolled Each Peach Pear Plum illustrated by Janet Ahlberg and written by Allan Ahlberg (1978).[17][18]

The nation, and international voters too, considered a ballot or all-time shortlist comprising ten of the 50 Medal-winning works, selected by six "children's book experts".[19] The panel provided annotations including recommended ages that range from 1+ to 10+ years; age 4+ for the winner.[19]

50th Anniversary Top Ten

Shortlists and Honorees edit

Headings give the official award dates: years of publication before 2006; years of presentation after 2006.[3]

Prior to the 1990's these listings cover only the Medalist and known Highly Commended (+) or Commended (–) books.[13][20]

1954 Carnegie Medal

Illustrator Harold Jones received a Special Commendation for the 1954 Carnegie Medal, for his part in Lavender's Blue: A Book of Nursery Rhymes, compiled by Kathleen Lines (Oxford) — a 180-page collection named for "Lavender's Blue", which Oxford University Press has reprinted many times. It was "a major reason" for the Library Association to establish the Kate Greenaway Medal that year.[13] No 1955 work was judged worthy in 1956, so the Greenaway was actually inaugurated one year later, recognising a 1956 publication.

1955 to 1989 edit

1955 (not awarded)

1956 Edward Ardizzone, Tim All Alone (Oxford) @

Ardizzone had inaugurated the Tim series in 1936 with Little Tim and the Brave Sea Captain (Oxford); its last sequel was Ships Cook Ginger (1977). Tim All Alone was named one of the top ten Medal-winning works in 2007.[8]

1957 V. H. Drummond, Mrs Easter and the Storks (Faber) @

1958 (not awarded)

No work was considered suitable, the second and last time.

1959 William Stobbs, Kashtanka (Oxford), by Anton Chekhov (1887) and A Bundle of Ballads (Oxford), by Ruth Manning-Sanders from the Child Ballads (19th century collection)

Edward Ardizzone, Titus in Trouble (Bodley Head), by James Reeves
Gerald Rose, Wuffles Goes To Town (Faber), by Elizabeth Rose

The 1959 medal recognised two books, the first of four such occasions to 1982. Two runners-up were "Commended", a new distinction that would be used 99 times in 44 years to 2002, including 31 "Highly Commended" books that were named beginning 1974.[13]

1960 Gerald Rose, Old Winkle and the Seagulls (Faber), by Elizabeth Rose

(no commendations)

1961 Antony Maitland, Mrs Cockle's Cat (Constable; Longman), by Philippa Pearce

(no commendations)

1962 Brian Wildsmith, ABC (Oxford) @

Carol Barker, Achilles the Donkey (Dobson), by H. E. Bates

ABC was Wildsmith's first book, an alphabet book without any words, commissioned by Mabel George at Oxford.

1963 John Burningham, Borka: The Adventures of a Goose With No Feathers (Jonathan Cape) @

Victor Ambrus, The Royal Navy (Oxford), by Peter Dawlish
– Victor Ambrus, A Time of Trial (Oxford), by Hester Burton
Brian Wildsmith, The Lion and the Rat: A Fable (Oxford), by Jean de La Fontaine (1668), from Aesop (6th century BCE)
– Brian Wildsmith, Oxford Book of Poetry for Children (Oxford), ed. Edward Blishen

Borka was Burningham's first book as an author or illustrator and it was named one of the top ten Medal-winning works in 2007.[8]

1964 C. Walter Hodges, Shakespeare's Theatre (Oxford) @ —nonfiction

Raymond Briggs, Fee Fi Fo Fum (Hamish Hamilton) @
Victor Ambrus, for work in general
William Papas, for work in general[b]

Hodges was a freelance illustrator, a lover of theatre, and an authority on theatre construction in Shakespeare's time. Shakespeare's Theatre was the first nonfiction book cited for the medal.

Ambrus and Papas received the first and only commendations for "work in general".

1965 Victor Ambrus, The Three Poor Tailors (Oxford; Hamish Hamilton) @

(no commendations)

The Three Poor Tailors was the first-published book written by Ambrus, who had illustrated dozens of fiction and nonfiction books for Oxford since immigrating from Hungary via Austria.

1966 Raymond Briggs, Mother Goose Treasury (Hamish Hamilton), traditional

– Doreen Roberts, The Story of Saul the King (Constable; Oxford), abridged from Helen Waddell, Stories from Holy Writ (1949)

1967 Charles Keeping, Charley, Charlotte and the Golden Canary (Oxford) @

William Papas, The Church (Oxford), by Geoffrey Moorhouse
– William Papas, No Mules (Oxford) @
Brian Wildsmith, Birds (Oxford) @

1968 Pauline Baynes, A Dictionary of Chivalry (Longman), by Grant Uden —reference

– Gaynor Chapman, The Luck Child: Based on a story of the Brothers Grimm (Hamish Hamilton), based on Brothers Grimm
Shirley Hughes, Flutes and Cymbals: Poetry for the Young (Bodley Head), compiled by Leonard Clark
William Papas, A Letter from India (Oxford) @[b] —information book
– William Papas, A Letter from Israel (Oxford) @ —information book
– William Papas, Taresh the tea planter (Oxford) @

Baynes alone has won the medal for illustrating a reference book; only a few nonfiction or fictionalised information books have been cited.

The distinguished runners-up (–) were called "Honours" rather than "Commended" for 1968, 1969, and perhaps 1970.

1969 Helen Oxenbury, The Quangle Wangle's Hat (Heinemann; Franklin Watts), by Edward Lear (late 19th century) and The Dragon of an Ordinary Family (Heinemann), by Margaret Mahy

Errol Le Cain, The Cabbage Princess (Faber) @
Charles Keeping, Joseph's Yard (Longman) @

The distinguished runners-up (–) were called "Honours" again.

1970 John Burningham, Mr Gumpy's Outing (Jonathan Cape) @

Charles Keeping, The God Beneath the Sea (Longman), by Leon Garfield and Edward Blishen
Jan Pieńkowski, The Golden Bird (J. M. Dent), by Edith Brill
– Krystyna Turska, Pegasus (Hamish Hamilton), the myth of Pegasus and Bellerophon retold by Turska

Burningham became the first to win two medals, 1963 and 1970, one year after his wife Helen Oxenbury won her first of two. As of 2012 fourteen illustrators have won two Greenaways, none three.

Garfield and Blishen won the companion Carnegie Medal for The God Beneath the Sea. (For more than fifty years until 2012, no single book won both of the CILIP awards.)

1971 Jan Pieńkowski, The Kingdom under the Sea and other stories (Jonathan Cape), retold by Joan Aiken

Victor Ambrus, The Sultan's Bath (Oxford) @
Brian Wildsmith, The Owl and the Woodpecker (Oxford) @

(One source calls these two runners-up "Highly Commended". They would be the first.)[21]

1972 Krystyna Turska, The Woodcutter's Duck (Hamish Hamilton) @

Carol Barker, King Midas and the Golden Touch (Franklin Watts), a version of the Midas myth
Pauline Baynes, Snail and Caterpillar (Longman), by Helen Piers
Antony Maitland, The Ghost Downstairs (Longman), by Leon Garfield

1973 Raymond Briggs, Father Christmas (Hamish Hamilton) @

– Fiona French, King Tree (Oxford) @
Errol Lloyd, My Brother Sean (Bodley Head), by Petronella Breinburg

Briggs introduced the grumpy old man with a challenging, lonely job, to be continued in Father Christmas Goes on Holiday ( ). Father Christmas was named one of the top ten Medal-winning works in 2007.[8]

1974 Pat Hutchins, The Wind Blew (Bodley Head) @

Mitsumasa Anno, Anno's Alphabet (Bodley Head) @
+ Charles Keeping, Railway Passage (Oxford) @

The Wind Blew has been called informative, meteorological poetry.[citation needed]

(According to answers.com citing Gale Biographies, Anno's Alphabet was ineligible for the medal, with its Japanese author and original publisher.)

1975 Victor Ambrus, Horses in Battle (Oxford) @ and Mishka (Oxford) @

Shirley Hughes, Helpers (Bodley Head) @
Errol Le Cain, Thorn Rose, or the Sleeping Beauty (Faber), from Brothers Grimm

Ambrus won his second medal. Horses in Battle, nonfiction or fictionalised history, is the latest "information book" to be cited except for one, Pirate Diary (2001).[22]

1976 Gail E. Haley, The Post Office Cat (Bodley Head) @

+ Graham Oakley, The Church Mice Adrift (Macmillan) @ —fifth of 12 Church Mice books
+ Maureen Roffey, Tinker, Tailor, Soldier, Sailor (Bodley Head), by Bernard Lodge
+ Joanna Troughton, How the Birds Changed Their Feathers (Blackie, Folk Tales of the World), retold and illustrated by Troughton @

Haley had won the 1971 Caldecott Medal (U.S.) and moved to the U.K. in 1973. No one else has won both medals, which CILIP rules and co-publication enable in the 21st century.

1977 Shirley Hughes, Dogger (Bodley Head) @

Janet Ahlberg, Burglar Bill (Heinemann), by Allan Ahlberg
– Mary Rayner, Garth Pig and the Ice Cream Lady (Macmillan) @

Dogger was named one of the top ten Medal-winning works in 2007, and was voted the public favourite from that slate.[8]

1978 Janet Ahlberg, Each Peach Pear Plum (Kestrel), by Allan Ahlberg

+ Raymond Briggs, The Snowman (Hamish Hamilton) @ —no text
Michael Foreman, Popular Folk Tales (Gollancz), newly translated from Brothers Grimm by Brian Alderson
Errol Le Cain, The Twelve Dancing Princesses (Faber), retold from Brothers Grimm by Le Cain

Each Peach Pear Plum was named one of the top ten Medal-winning works in 2007, and finished a close second in public voting on that slate.[8]

1979 Jan Pieńkowski, The Haunted House (Heinemann) @

+ Quentin Blake, The Wild Washerwomen: A new folk tale ( ), by John Yeoman
Pat Hutchins, One-Eyed Jack ( ) @

Pieńkowski won his second medal.

1980 Quentin Blake, Mr Magnolia (Jonathan Cape) @

Beryl Cook, Seven Years and a Day (Collins), by Colette O'Hare
+ Michael Foreman, City of Gold and other stories from the Old Testament (Gollancz), retold by Peter Dickinson
Jill Murphy, Peace at Last ( ) @

Mister Magnolia was named one of the top ten Medal-winning works in 2007.[8]

Dickinson won the companion Carnegie Medal for City of Gold. (For more than fifty years until 2012, no single book won both of the CILIP awards.)

1981 Charles Keeping, The Highwayman (Oxford), an edition of the 1906 poem by Alfred Noyes

Nicola Bayley, The Patchwork Cat (Jonathan Cape), by William Mayne
+ Jan Ormerod, Sunshine (Kestrel) @

Keeping won his second medal. The Highwayman was named one of the top ten Medal-winning works in 2007.[8]

1982 Michael Foreman, Long Neck and Thunder Foot (Kestrel), by Helen Piers and Sleeping Beauty and other favourite fairy tales (Gollancz), selected and translated by Angela Carter

Janet Ahlberg, The Baby's Catalogue ( ), by Allan Ahlberg
+ Graham Oakley, The Church Mice in Action (Macmillan) @ —eighth of twelve Church Mice books

The 1982 medal recognised two books, the last of four times from 1959. Sleeping Beauty also won the inaugural Kurt Maschler Award for children's book "text and illustration ... integrated so that each enhances and balances the other."[23]

Oakley and the Church Mice series were highly commended for the second time, the first double recognition for a series (books five and eight). Subsequently, Janet Ahlberg (Jolly Postman series) and Chris Riddell (Diary series) were runners-up for the first books and medalists for the sequels.

1983 Anthony Browne, Gorilla (Julia MacRae) @

Molly Bang, Ten, Nine, Eight ( ) @ —a counting book
Michael Foreman, The Saga of Erik the Viking (Pavilion), by Terry Jones
– Ron Maris, My Book (Julia MacRae) @

Gorilla was named one of the top ten Medal-winning works in 2007.[8] It also won the annual Kurt Maschler Award for integrated text and illustration.[23]

Ten, Nine, Eight was also a runner-up for the U.S. Caldecott Medal ("Honour Book").

1984 Errol Le Cain, Hiawatha's Childhood (Faber), a section of the 1855 poem by Longfellow

(no commendations)

1985 Juan Wijngaard, Sir Gawain and the Loathly Lady (Walker), retold by Selina Hastings

Michael Foreman, Seasons of Splendour: Tales, myths, and legends of India (Pavilion), by Madhur Jaffrey
– Gillian McClure, Tog the Ribber, or, Granny's Tale (Andre Deutsch), poem by Paul Coltman

1986 Fiona French, Snow White in New York (Oxford) @

Janet Ahlberg, The Jolly Postman (Heinemann), by Allan Ahlberg
– Paddy Bouma, Are We Nearly There? (Bodley Head), by Louis Baum
Babette Cole, Princess Smartypants ( ) @
+ Jan Ormerod, Happy Christmas, Gemma (Walker), by Sarah Hayes
– Fiona Pragoff, How Many?: From 0 to 20 (Gollancz) @
Tony Ross, I Want My Potty ( ) @ —the first Little Princess book

The Ahlbergs won the Emils for The Jolly Postman (Kurt Maschler Award).[23]

1987 Adrienne Kennaway, Crafty Chameleon (Hodder & Stoughton), by Mwenye Hadithi

Babette Cole, Prince Cinders ( ) @
Errol Le Cain, The Enchanter's Daughter (Jonathan Cape), by Antonia Barber
Jill Murphy, All in One Piece ( ) @

1988 Barbara Firth, Can't You Sleep Little Bear? (Walker), by Martin Waddell

– Ruth Brown, Ladybird, Ladybird (Andersen), a traditional rhyme
+ Anthony Browne, Alice's Adventures in Wonderland ( ), an edition of the 1865 classic by Lewis Carroll
Penny Dale, Wake Up Mr. B! (Walker) @
+ Roberto Innocenti, The Adventures of Pinocchio (Creative Education), an edition of the 1883 classic by Carlo Collodi
+ Alan Lee, Merlin Dreams ( ), by Peter Dickinson

Browne won an Emil for this edition of Alice (Kurt Maschler Award).[23]

Special 1988 commendation: David Burnie, Bird (Dorling Kindersley, in association with the National History Museum)[24]

1989 Michael Foreman, War Boy: a Country Childhood (Pavilion) @ —autobiographical

+ Helen Oxenbury, We're Going on a Bear Hunt (Walker), retold by Michael Rosen

Foreman won his second medal. Oxenbury was highly commended for the first of four times.

1990s edit

In 1991 Janet Ahlberg won her second medal, both for books that were husband-and-wife collaborations. The Jolly Christmas Postman was the second of three interactive Jolly Postman books; the last would be published posthumously. Janet Ahlberg is one of three people to be commended for the Greenaway Medal, at least, for two books in a series.

1992 saw Anthony Browne win his second medal, on this occasion for Zoo written by Julia MacRae.

In 1993 Michael Foreman was a distinguished runner-up for the fifth time (once highly commended).

In 1994 Helen Oxenbury was the lone "Highly Commended" runner-up for the fourth time in six years. The distinction would be used 31 times in 29 years to 2002. Oxenbury and author Trish Cooke would also win the Emils (Kurt Maschler Award) for So Much.[23]

In 1995 Patrick Benson and author Kathy Henderson won the Emils (Kurt Maschler Award) for The Little Boat.[23]

1997, 1998 and 1999 marked second medal wins for three different illustrators. In 1997 P. J. Lynch won for the second time with When Jessie Came Across the Sea, and in 1998 Helen Cooper did the same with Pumpkin Soup. The final year of the decade saw Helen Oxenbury win her second Greenaway Medal for Alice's Adventures in Wonderland, which would go onto be named one of the top ten Medal-winning works in 2007.[8] Oxenbury also won her second Emil (Kurt Maschler Award), which were subsequently discontinued having run from 1982 to 1999.[23]

Colour key:

  – Medal Winner
  – Highly commended
  – Commended
Medal winners, Commendations and Shortlists, 1990-1999
Year Illustrator Title Publisher Author (if different) Result Ref.
1990 Gary Blythe The Whales' Song Hutchinson Dyan Sheldon Winner [13]
Tony Ross Dr Xargle's Book of Earth Tiggers Andersen Press Jeanne Willis Highly commended [13]
Nicola Bayley The Mousehole Cat Walker Books Antonia Barber Commended [13]
Roberto Innocenti A Christmas Carol Creative Education an edition of the 1843 classic by Charles Dickens Commended [13]
Penny Dale Rosie's Babies Walker Books Martin Waddell Shortlist [25][26]
Kim Lewis The Shepherd Boy Walker Books Shortlist [25]
Jane Ray Noah’s Ark Orchard Books Shortlist [27]
1991 Janet Ahlberg The Jolly Christmas Postman Heinemann Allan Ahlberg Winner [13]
Helen Oxenbury Farmer Duck Walker Books Martin Waddell Highly commended [13]
Caroline Binch Amazing Grace Dial Mary Hoffman Commended [13]
Jeannie Baker Window Julia MacRae — (no text) Shortlist [28]
Fiona French Anancy and Mr Dry-Bone Frances Lincoln Shortlist [28]
P. J. Lynch East o' the Sun and West o' the Moon Walker Books translated by George W. Dasent Shortlist [28]
Jane Ray The Story of Christmas Orchard Books Shortlist [28]
1992 Anthony Browne Zoo Julia MacRae Winner [13]
Jill Barton The Pig in the Pond Walker Books Martin Waddell Highly commended [13]
Caroline Binch Hue Boy Dial Rita Phillips Mitchell Highly commended [13]
Stephen Biesty Incredible Cross-Sections Dorling Kindersley Richard Platt Shortlist [29]
Robert Ingpen Treasure Island Dragon's World an edition of the 1883 classic by Robert Louis Stevenson Shortlist [25]
Francesca Martin The Honey Hunters Walker Books Shortlist [25]
Korky Paul The Dog That Dug Bodley Head Jonathan Long Shortlist [30]
1993 Alan Lee Black Ships Before Troy Frances Lincoln Rosemary Sutcliff Winner [13]
Helen Oxenbury The Three Little Wolves and the Big Bad Pig Heinemann Young Books Eugene Trivizas Highly commended [13]
Michael Foreman War Game Pavilion Commended [13]
Angela Barrett Beware Beware Walker Books Susan Hill Shortlist [31]
Gary Blythe The Garden Hutchinson Dyan Sheldon Shortlist [31]
Helen Cooper The Bear Under the Stairs Doubleday Shortlist [31]
Jill Murphy A Quiet Night In Walker Books Shortlist [31]
1994 Gregory Rogers Way Home Andersen Press Libby Hathorn Winner [13]
Helen Oxenbury So Much Walker Books Trish Cooke Highly commended [13]
Chris Riddell Something Else Puffin Kathryn Cave Commended [13]
Caroline Binch Gregory Cool Frances Lincoln Shortlist [32]
Anthony Browne King Kong Julia MacRae from the 1932 novelised story of King Kong Shortlist [32]
Paul Geraghty The Hunter Hutchinson Shortlist [32]
P. J. Lynch Catkin Walker Books Antonia Barber Shortlist [32]
Jane Ray The Happy Prince Orchard Books from the fairy tale by Oscar Wilde Shortlist [32]
1995 P. J. Lynch The Christmas Miracle of Jonathan Toomey Walker Books Susan Wojciechowski Winner [13]
Patrick Benson The Little Boat Walker Books Kathy Henderson Highly commended [13]
Quentin Blake Clown Jonathan Cape Commended [13]
Christina Balit Blodin the Beast Frances Lincoln Michael Morpurgo Shortlist [33]
Ken Brown Tattybogle Andersen Press Sandra Horn Shortlist [33]
Mick Inkpen Nothing Hodder Shortlist [33]
Colin McNaughton Here Come the Aliens Walker Books Shortlist [33]
1996 Helen Cooper The Baby Who Wouldn't Go To Bed Doubleday Winner [13][34]
Caroline Binch Down by the River Heinemann Grace Hallworth Highly commended [13][34]
Christina Balit Ishtar and Tammuz: A Babylonian myth of the seasons Frances Lincoln retold by Christopher Moore Commended [13][34]
Ruth Brown The Tale of the Monstrous Toad Andersen Press Shortlist [35]
Susan Field The Smallest Whale Orchard Books Elisabeth Beresford Shortlist [35]
Debi Gliori Mr Bear to the Rescue Orchard Books Shortlist [35]
Colin McNaughton Oops! Andersen Press Shortlist [35]
Korky Paul The Duck That Had No Luck Bodley Head Jonathan Long Shortlist [35]
1997 P. J. Lynch When Jessie Came Across the Sea Walker Books Amy Hest Winner [13]
Bob Graham Queenie the Bantam Walker Books Highly commended [13]
Charlotte Voake Ginger Walker Books Highly commended [13]
Ken Brown Mucky Pup Andersen Press Shortlist [36]
Anthony Browne Willy the Dreamer Walker Books Shortlist [36]
Peter Collington A Small Miracle Jonathan Cape — (no text) Shortlist [36]
Clare Mackie Book of Nonsense Macdonald Young Books Michael Rosen Shortlist [36]
Sophie Windham Unicorns! Unicorns! Hutchinson Geraldine McCaughrean Shortlist [36]
1998 Helen Cooper Pumpkin Soup Doubleday Winner [13]
Shirley Hughes The Lion and the Unicorn Bodley Head Highly commended [13]
Jane Simmons Come on Daisy! Orchard Books Highly commended [13]
Christian Birmingham The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe HarperCollins an edition of the 1950 classic by C. S. Lewis Shortlist [37]
Quentin Blake Zagazoo Jonathan Cape Shortlist [37]
Anthony Browne Voices in the Park Doubleday Shortlist [37]
Emma Chichester Clark I Love You, Blue Kangaroo Andersen Press Shortlist [37]
1999 Helen Oxenbury Alice's Adventures in Wonderland Walker Books an edition of the 1865 classic by Lewis Carroll Winner [13]
Lauren Child Clarice Bean, That's Me! Orchard Books Highly commended [13]
Chris Riddell Castle Diary: The Journal of Tobias Burgess, Page Walker Books Richard Platt Highly commended [13]
Kevin Hawkes Weslandia Walker Books Paul Fleischman Commended [13]
Patrick Benson The Sea-Thing Child Walker Books Russell Hoban Shortlist [38]
Christian Birmingham Wombat Goes Walkabout HarperCollins Michael Morpurgo Shortlist [38]
Kathy Henderson The Storm Walker Books Shortlist [38]
Simon James Days Like This Walker Books Shortlist [38]

2000s edit

Thanks to a bequest left in 2000 by children’s book and illustration collector, Colin Mears, the winner now receives a cheque for £5000 along with the Greenaway Medal.

The winning book in the year 2000, I Will Never Not Ever Eat a Tomato was named one of the top ten Medal-winning works in 2007, and ranked third in public voting from that slate.[18]

In 2001, Pirate Diary became the latest "information book" to be cited for the medal and the first since 1975.[22] It was the second in a series of four first-person journals, inaugurated by Richard Platt and Chris Riddell in 1999 (Castle Diary) and continued by Platt with another illustrator. Riddell was the third and latest illustrator to be at least commended for the Greenaway for books in a series, following Graham Oakley (Church Mice, 1976 and 1982) and Janet Ahlberg (Jolly Postman, 1986 and 1991).

2002 saw Bob Graham become the first medalist from Australia. Lauren Child was the last "Commended" or "Highly Commended" runner-up; there had been 99 such distinctions over 44 years.

Twenty-six years after her first medal, 2003 marked a second win for Shirley Hughes and Ella's Big Chance —a retelling of Cinderella. Commendations ceased to be awarded in this year. Since 2003 there have usually been eight books on the shortlist.

In 2004, Chris Riddell was awarded his second medal, this time for Jonathan Swift's "Gulliver". In this year there were only 7 shortlisted books.

Wolves by Emily Gravett in its U.S. edition was Gravett's first book as author or illustrator, just one year out of college. She won the 49th Greenaway Medal, awarded in its 51st year (2005). Three years later in 2008, when once again there were only 7 shortlisted nominations, Emily Gravett won her second medal for her fourth book, with the cover title Little Mouse's Emily Gravett's Big Book of Fears.

Colour key:

  – Medal Winner
  – Highly commended
  – Commended
Medal winners, Commendations and Shortlists, 2000-2009
Year Illustrator Title Publisher Author (if different) Result Ref.
2000 Lauren Child I Will Never Not Ever Eat a Tomato Orchard Books Winner [39][40][41]
Anthony Browne Willy's Pictures Highly commended [13]
Ted Dewan Crispin: The Pig Who Had It All Transworld Commended [13]
Ruth Brown Snail Trail Shortlist [42]
Lauren Child Beware of the Storybook Wolves Hodder Children's Books Shortlist [42]
Jane Ray Fairy Tales Walker Books Berlie Doherty Shortlist [42]
2001 Chris Riddell Pirate Diary: The Journal of Jake Carpenter Walker Books Richard Platt Winner [43][44]
Jez Alborough Fix-it Duck Picture Lions Highly commended [43]
Charles Fuge Sometimes I Like to Curl Up in a Ball Gullane Vicki Churchill Highly commended [43]
Russell Ayto The Witch's Children Orchard Books Ursula Jones Shortlist [45]
Nicola Bayley Katje the Windmill Cat Walker Books Gretchen Woelfle Shortlist [45]
Caroline Binch Silver Shoes Dorling Kindersley Shortlist [45]
Helen Cooper Tatty Ratty Doubleday Shortlist [45]
Bob Graham Let's Get a Pup! Walker Books Shortlist [45]
2002 Bob Graham Jethro Byrde, Fairy Child Walker Books Winner [46][47][48]
Lauren Child That Pesky Rat Orchard Books Commended [49]
Simon Bartram Man on the Moon Templar Shortlist [50][51]
Nick Butterworth Albert le Blanc Collins Shortlist [50][51]
Lauren Child Who's Afraid of the Big Bad Book? Hodder Shortlist [50][51]
David Melling The Kiss That Missed Hodder Shortlist [50][51]
Nick Sharratt Pants David Fickling Books Giles Andrae Shortlist [50][51]
Helen Ward The Cockerel and the Fox Templar —a retelling of Chanticleer and the Fox Shortlist [50][51]
2003 Shirley Hughes Ella's Big Chance Bodley Head —a retelling of Cinderella Winner [52][53][54]
Anthony Browne The Shape Game Doubleday Shortlist [55]
Alexis Deacon Beegu Hutchinson Shortlist [55]
Debi Gliori Always and Forever Doubleday Alan Durant Shortlist [55]
Mini Grey The Pea and the Princess Red Fox —a retelling of "The Princess and the Pea" Shortlist [55]
Dave McKean The Wolves in the Walls Bloomsbury Neil Gaiman Shortlist [55]
Bee Willey Bob Robber and Dancing Jane Jonathan Cape Andrew Matthews Shortlist [55]
Chris Wormell Two Frogs Red Fox ; Jonathan Cape Shortlist [55]
2004 Chris Riddell Jonathan Swift's "Gulliver" Walker Books the 1726 classic Gulliver's Travels adapted by Martin Jenkins Winner [56][57][58]
Ian Andrew The Boat Templar Helen Ward Shortlist [59]
Russell Ayto One More Sheep Hodder Mij Kelly Shortlist [59]
Simon Bartram Dougal's Deep-Sea Diary Templar Shortlist [59]
Quentin Blake Michael Rosen's Sad Book Walker Books Michael Rosen Shortlist [59]
Nick Butterworth The Whisperer HarperCollins Shortlist [59]
John Kelly Guess Who's Coming For Dinner? Templar Cathy Tincknell Shortlist [59]
2005 Emily Gravett Wolves Pan Macmillan Winner [60][61]
Tony DiTerlizzi Arthur Spiderwick's Field Guide to the Fantastical World Around You Simon & Schuster Holly Black Shortlist [62][63]
Mini Grey Traction Man is Here Red Fox Shortlist [62][63]
Oliver Jeffers Lost and Found HarperCollins Shortlist [62][63]
Dave McKean Mirrormask Bloomsbury Neil Gaiman Shortlist [62][63]
Jane Ray Jinnie Ghost Frances Lincoln Berlie Doherty Shortlist [62][63]
David Roberts Little Red: A Fizzingly Good Yarn Abrams Books Lynn Roberts Shortlist [62][63]
Rob Scotton Russell the Sheep HarperCollins Shortlist [62][63]
2006 After 2006 the awards year was adjusted. Before 2007 the year refers to when the book was published rather than when the medal was awarded i.e. the 2005 winner was announced and the medal presented in July 2006.
2007 Mini Grey The Adventures of the Dish and the Spoon Jonathan Cape Winner [64][17]
Ross Collins The Elephantom Templar Shortlist [65]
Emily Gravett Orange Pear Apple Bear Pan Macmillan — (four words only) Shortlist [65]
John Kelly and Cathy Tincknell Scoop! An Exclusive by Monty Molenski Templar Shortlist [65]
Catherine Rayner Augustus and His Smile Little Tiger Shortlist [65]
Chris Riddell The Emperor of Absurdia Pan Macmillan Shortlist [65]
2008 Emily Gravett Little Mouse's Big Book of Fears Pan Macmillan Winner [66][67]
Anthony Browne Silly Billy Walker Books Shortlist [68][69]
Polly Dunbar Penguin Walker Books Shortlist [68][69]
Emily Gravett Monkey and Me Pan Macmillan Shortlist [68][69]
Jane Ray The Lost Happy Endings Bloomsbury Carol Ann Duffy Shortlist [68][69]
Chris Riddell Ottoline and the Yellow Cat Pan Macmillan Shortlist [68][69]
Ed Vere Banana! Puffin Books Shortlist [68][69]
2009 Catherine Rayner Harris Finds His Feet Little Tiger Winner [70][71]
Angela Barrett The Snow Goose Hutchinson an edition of the 1941 novella by Paul Gallico Shortlist [72][73]
Marc Craste Varmints Templar Helen Ward Shortlist [72][73]
Thomas Docherty Little Boat Templar Shortlist [72][73]
Bob Graham How to Heal a Broken Wing Walker Books Shortlist [72][73]
Oliver Jeffers The Way Back Home HarperCollins Shortlist [72][73]
Dave McKean The Savage Walker Books David Almond Shortlist [72][73]
Chris Wormell Molly and the Night Monster Jonathan Cape Shortlist [72][73]

2010s edit

In 2012, Jim Kay and Patrick Ness won both the Greenaway and Carnegie Medals for A Monster Calls, the first such double. Prior to this, two illustrators of Carnegie Medal-winning books had been runners-up for the Greenaway, namely Charles Keeping (The God Beneath the Sea, 1970) and Michael Foreman (City of Gold, 1980).

2014 marked the first time that the same book had won both the Greenaway and Caldecott medals, having won the latter in 2013.[10][74] The winner, Jon Klassen, the first Greenaway medalist from Canada, was shortlisted for two separate publications.[75] In this year the shortlist comprised only seven nominations as opposed to the usual slate of eight.

In 2016, Chris Riddell became the first triple medalist in the history of the award, having also previously won in 2001 and 2004.

From 2016 to 2018 an additional award, The Amnesty CLIP Honour, was bestowed upon a shortlisted entry in conjunction with Amnesty International for "books that most distinctively illuminate, uphold or celebrate freedoms."[76] In 2016 There’s a Bear on My Chair received the inaugural honour[77] and in 2017 the winner was The Journey, illustrated and written by Italian artist Francesca Sanna, which followed a family of refugees.[78][79] In 2018, Levi Penfold received the honour for his black and white illustrations in The Song from Somewhere Else.[80]

In 2018 there were only seven shortlisted nominees as opposed to the usual slate of eight. The winner, Sydney Smith would go on to win again in 2021.

In 2019 the Amnesty CLIP Honour was superseded by the Shadowers' Choice Award, voted for and awarded by children and young people who shadow the Medals.[81][82]

Colour key:

  – Medal Winner
  – Amnesty CLIP Honour (2016—2018) and Shadowers' Choice Award (2019—) winner if different from Medal winner
Medal winners and Shortlists, 2010-2019
Year Illustrator Title Publisher Author (if different) Result Ref.
2010 Freya Blackwood Harry and Hopper Scholastic Margaret Wild Winner [83][84][85]
Grahame Baker-Smith Leon and the Place Between Templar Angela McAllister Shortlist [86][87]
Oliver Jeffers The Great Paper Caper HarperCollins Shortlist [86][87]
Satoshi Kitamura Millie's Marvellous Hat Andersen Shortlist [86][87]
Dave McKean Crazy Hair Bloomsbury Neil Gaiman Shortlist [86][87]
Chris Riddell The Graveyard Book Bloomsbury Neil Gaiman Shortlist [86][87]
David Roberts The Dunderheads Walker Books Paul Fleischman Shortlist [86][87]
Viviane Schwarz There Are Cats in This Book Walker Books Shortlist [86][87]
2011 Grahame Baker-Smith FArTHER Templar Winner [88][89]
Anthony Browne Me and You Doubleday Shortlist [90][91]
Bob Graham April Underhill Tooth Fairy Walker Books Shortlist [90][91]
Mini Grey Jim Jonathan Cape Hilaire Belloc, 1907 Shortlist [90][91]
Oliver Jeffers The Heart and the Bottle HarperCollins Shortlist [90][91]
Kristin Oftedal Big Bear, Little Brother Pan Macmillan Carl Norac Shortlist [90][91]
Catherine Rayner Ernest Pan Macmillan Shortlist [90][91]
Juan Wijngaard Cloud Tea Monkeys Walker Books Mal Peet and Elspeth Graham Shortlist [90][91]
2012 Jim Kay A Monster Calls Walker Books Patrick Ness Winner [92][93][94]
Emily Gravett Wolf Won't Bite! Pan Macmillan Shortlist [95][96][97]
Petr Horáček Puffin Peter Walker Books Shortlist [95][96][97]
Dave McKean Slog's Dad Walker Books David Almond Shortlist [95][96][97]
Catherine Rayner Solomon Crocodile Pan Macmillan Shortlist [95][96][97]
Rob Ryan The Gift Barefoot Books Carol Ann Duffy Shortlist [95][96][97]
Viviane Schwarz There Are No Cats in This Book Walker Books Shortlist [95][96][97]
Vicky White Can We Save the Tiger? (nonfiction) Walker Books Martin Jenkins Shortlist [95][96][97]
2013 Levi Pinfold Black Dog Templar Winner [98][99]
Rebecca Cobb Lunchtime Pan Macmillan Shortlist [100][101][102]
Emily Gravett Again! Pan Macmillan Shortlist [100][101][102]
Chris Haughton Oh No, George! Walker Books Shortlist [100][101][102]
Jon Klassen I Want My Hat Back Walker Books Shortlist [100][101][102]
Chris Mould Pirates 'n' Pistols Hodder Shortlist [100][101][102]
Helen Oxenbury King Jack and the Dragon Puffin Books Peter Bently Shortlist [100][101][102]
Salvatore Rubbino Just Ducks! Walker Books Nicola Davies Shortlist [100][101][102]
2014 Jon Klassen This is Not My Hat Walker Books Winner [103][104][105]
Rebecca Cobb The Paper Dolls Pan Macmillan Julia Donaldson Shortlist [106][107][108]
Olivia Gill Where My Wellies Take Me Templar Michael Morpurgo and Clare Morpurgo Shortlist [106][107][108]
Oliver Jeffers The Day the Crayons Quit HarperCollins Drew Daywalt Shortlist [106][107][108]
Jon Klassen The Dark Orchard Books Lemony Snicket Shortlist [106][107][108]
Dave McKean Mouse Bird Snake Wolf Walker Books David Almond Shortlist [106][107][108]
Birgitta Sif Oliver Walker Books Shortlist [106][107][108]
2015 William Grill Shackleton's Journey Flying Eye Books Winner [109][110][111]
Laura Carlin The Promise Walker Books Nicola Davies Shortlist [112][113][114]
Alexis Deacon Jim's Lion Walker Books Russell Hoban Shortlist [112][113][114]
John Higgins and Marc Olivent Dark Satanic Mills Walker Books Marcus Sedgwick and Julian Sedgwick Shortlist [112][113][114]
Catherine Rayner Smelly Louie Pan Macmillan Shortlist [112][113][114]
Chris Riddell Goth Girl and the Ghost of a Mouse Pan Macmillan Shortlist [112][113][114]
David Roberts Tinder Orion Books Sally Gardner Shortlist [112][113][114]
Shaun Tan Rules of Summer Lothian Publishing Shortlist [112][113][114]
2016 Chris Riddell The Sleeper and the Spindle Bloomsbury Neil Gaiman Winner [115]
Ross Collins There's a Bear on My Chair Nosy Crow Shortlist and Amnesty CILIP Honoree [116][117]
Anthony Browne Willy's Stories Walker Books Shortlist [116][117]
Oliver Jeffers Once Upon an Alphabet HarperCollins Shortlist [116][117]
Jon Klassen Sam & Dave Dig a Hole Walker Books Mac Barnett Shortlist [116][117]
Jackie Morris Something About a Bear Frances Lincoln Shortlist [116][117]
Helen Oxenbury Captain Jack and the Pirates Puffin Books Peter Bently Shortlist [116][117]
Sydney Smith Footpath Flowers Walker Books JonArno Lawson Shortlist [116][117]
2017 Lane Smith There is a Tribe of Kids Two Hoots Winner [79]
Francesca Sanna The Journey Flying Eye Books Shortlist and Amnesty CILIP Honoree [118][119]
Dieter Braun Wild Animals of the North Flying Eye Books Shortlist [118][119]
Emily Gravett Tidy Two Hoots Shortlist [118][119]
William Grill The Wolves of Currumpaw Flying Eye Books Shortlist [118][119]
Jim Kay Harry Potter and the Philosopher's Stone Bloomsbury J. K. Rowling Shortlist [118][119]
Chris Riddell A Great Big Cuddle Walker Books Michael Rosen Shortlist [118][119]
Brian Selznick The Marvels Scholastic Shortlist [118][119]
2018 Sydney Smith Town is by the Sea Walker Books Joanne Schwartz Winner [120]
Levi Pinfold The Song from Somewhere Else Bloomsbury A.F. Harrold Shortlist and Amnesty CILIP Honoree [121][122]
Laura Carlin King of the Sky Walker Books Nicola Davies Shortlist [121][122]
Debi Gliori Night Shift Hot Key Books Shortlist [121][122]
Petr Horáček A First Book of Animals Walker Books Nicola Davies Shortlist [121][122]
Pam Smy Thornhill David Fickling Books Shortlist [121][122]
Britta Teckentrup Under the Same Sky Little Tiger Shortlist [121][122]
2019 Jackie Morris The Lost Words Hamish Hamilton Robert Macfarlane Winner & Shadowers' Choice Award [123]
Jon Klassen The Wolf, the Duck and the Mouse Walker Books Mac Barnett Shortlist [124][125]
Rebecca Cobb The Day War Came Walker Books Nicola Davies Shortlist [124][125]
Eric Fan and Terry Fan Ocean Meets Sky Frances Lincoln Shortlist [124][125]
Maria Gulemetova Beyond the Fence Child's Play Shortlist [124][125]
Jessica Love Julian is a Mermaid Walker Books Shortlist [124][125]
Poonam Mistry You're Safe With Me Lantana Publishing Chitra Soundar Shortlist [124][125]
David Roberts Suffragette: The Battle for Equality Two Hoots Shortlist [124][125]

2020s edit

In 2020, Australian artist Shaun Tan became first BAME author to win the Greenaway Medal in its 64-year history.[126]

In 2022, Long Way Down by Danica Novgorodoff became the first graphic novel to win the medal since Raymond BriggsFather Christmas in 1973.[127] The 2023 medal also went to a graphic novel.[128] In that year there were only six shortlisted nominees as opposed to the usual slate of eight.

Colour key:

  – Medal Winner
  – Shadowers' Choice Award winner if different from Medal winner
Medal winners and Shortlists, 2020-
Year Illustrator Title Publisher Author (if different) Result Ref.
2020 Shaun Tan Tales from the Inner City Walker Books Winner [129][126]
Kadir Nelson The Undefeated Andersen Press Kwame Alexander Shortlist & Shadowers' Choice Award [130][131]
Poonam Mistry You're Snug with Me Lantana Publishing Chitra Soundar Shortlist [130][131]
Chris Mould The Iron Man Faber & Faber Ted Hughes Shortlist [130][131]
Chris Naylor-Ballesteros The Suitcase Nosy Crow Shortlist [130][131]
Levi Pinfold The Dam Walker Books David Almond Shortlist [130][131]
Júlia Sardà Mary and Frankenstein Andersen Press Linda Bailey Shortlist [130][131]
Beth Waters Child of St Kilda Child's Play Shortlist [130][131]
2021 Sydney Smith Small in the City Walker Books Winner [132][133]
Sharon King-Chai Starbird Two Hoots Shortlist & Shadowers' Choice Award [134][135]
Sara Lundberg The Bird Within Me Book Island — (translated by B. J. Epstein) Shortlist [134][135]
Kate Milner It's a No-Money Day Barrington Stoke Shortlist [134][135]
Poonam Mistry How The Stars Came To Be Tate Publishing Shortlist [134][135]
Pete Oswald Hike Walker Books Shortlist [134][135]
David Ouimet I Go Quiet Canongate Shortlist [134][135]
Catherine Rayner Arlo The Lion Who Couldn't Sleep Pan Macmillan Shortlist [134][135]
2022 Danica Novgorodoff Long Way Down Faber & Faber Jason Reynolds Winner [127][136]
Mariachiara Di Giorgio The Midnight Fair Walker Books Gideon Sterer Shortlist & Shadowers' Choice Award [137][138]
George Butler Drawn Across Borders Walker Books Shortlist [137][138]
Emily Gravett Too Much Stuff Pan Macmillan Shortlist [137][138]
Christian Robinson Milo Imagines the World Pan Macmillan Matt de la Peña Shortlist [137][138]
Yu Rong Shu Lin's Grandpa Otter-Barry Books Matt Goodfellow Shortlist [137][138]
Sydney Smith I Talk Like a River Walker Books Jordan Scott Shortlist [137][138]
Peter Van den Ende The Wanderer Pushkin Children's Books — (no text) Shortlist [137][138]
2023 Jeet Zdung Saving Sorya: Chang and the Sun Bear Kingfisher Trang Nguyen Winner [128][139]
Joe Todd-Stanton The Comet Flying Eye Books Shortlist & Shadowers' Choice Award [140]
Flora Delargy Rescuing Titanic Wide Eyed Editions Shortlist [140]
Benjamin Phillips Alte Zachen: Old Things Cicada Ziggy Hanaor Shortlist [140]
Levi Pinfold The Worlds We Leave Behind Bloomsbury Children's Books A.F. Harrold Shortlist [140]
Yu Rong The Visible Sounds UCLan Jianling Yin Shortlist [140]
2024 Aaron Becker The Tree and the River Walker Books Shortlist [141]
Catalina Echeverri April's Garden Graffeg Isla McGuckin Shortlist [141]
Mariajo Ilustrajo Lost Quarto Shortlist [141]
Steve McCarthy The Wilderness Walker Books Shortlist [141]
Erika Meza To the Other Side Hachette Shortlist [141]
Poonam Mistry The Midnight Panther Bonnier Shortlist [141]
Catherine Rayner The Bowerbird Macmillan Julia Donaldson Shortlist [141]
Chloe Savage The Search for the Giant Arctic Jellyfish Walker Books Shortlist [141]

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ The companion Carnegie Medal was inaugurated in 1937 for the 1936 publication year, so its 70th anniversary genuinely underlay the 2007 celebration of both awards; Carnegie history then covered seventy years of children's book publication, 1936–2005. That was also the 50th anniversary of the first Greenaway Medal awarded, but only because no work was judged suitable in the Greenaway's first year; Greenaway history then covered fifty-one publication years, 1955–2005.
  2. ^ a b Papas was a Commended runner-up for the 1964, 1967, and 1968 Greenaway Medals, recognising the year's best work(s) of illustration for children. CCSU lists no single book commended for 1964 (rather, Papas commended "for work in general"); two for 1967 (The Church and No Mules); three for 1968 (A Letter from India, A Letter from Israel, and Taresh the tea planter). Those five books were all published by Oxford University Press. It is unknown whether any of them were individually considered for the Medal and commended as runners-up. At that time, as near as Helen Oxenbury in 1969, the Medal was sometimes conferred upon an illustrator for multiple named books.
    · "Kate Greenaway Medal". 2007(?). Curriculum Lab. Elihu Burritt Library. Central Connecticut State University (CCSU). Retrieved 2012-06-25.
    · "Kate Greenaway Medal: Full List of Winners". CILIP Carnegie & Kate Greenaway Children's Book Awards. CILIP. Retrieved 2012-06-25.

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Citations

(homepage). Sponsored by CILIP and others. Retrieved 2012-05-06.

  • (subsite). The CILIP ... Book Awards. Retrieved 2012-05-06.
    Select from the menu at left.[page needed]

External links edit

  • Kate Greenaway Medal at loveTheBook
  • Renaming the Kate Greenaway Medal article at TeenLibrarian

kate, greenaway, medal, carnegie, medal, illustration, until, 2022, british, award, that, annually, recognises, distinguished, illustration, book, children, conferred, upon, illustrator, chartered, institute, library, information, professionals, cilip, which, . The Carnegie Medal for Illustration until 2022 the Kate Greenaway Medal is a British award that annually recognises distinguished illustration in a book for children It is conferred upon the illustrator by the Chartered Institute of Library and Information Professionals CILIP 1 which inherited it from the Library Association CILIP is currently partnered with the audio technology company Yoto in connection with the award though their sponsorship and the removal of Greenaway s name from the medal proved controversial 2 The Medal is named after the 19th century English illustrator of children s books Kate Greenaway 1846 1901 1 It was established in 1955 and inaugurated next year for 1955 publications but no work was considered suitable 3 The first Medal was awarded in 1957 to Edward Ardizzone for Tim All Alone Oxford 1956 which he also wrote That first Medal was dated 1956 Since 2007 the Medal has been dated by its presentation during the year following publication This medal is a companion to the Carnegie Medal which recognises one outstanding work of writing for children and young adults conferred upon the author 4 Nominated books must be first published in the U K during the preceding school year September to August with English language text if any 5 The award by CILIP is a gold Medal and 500 worth of books donated to the illustrator s chosen library Since 2000 there is also a 5000 cash prize from a bequest by the children s book collector Colin Mears 1 Contents 1 Rules 2 Winners 3 Winners of multiple awards 4 50 year Greenaway of Greenaways 2007 5 Shortlists and Honorees 5 1 1955 to 1989 5 2 1990s 5 3 2000s 5 4 2010s 5 5 2020s 6 See also 7 Notes 8 References 9 External linksRules editLibrary and information professionals CILIP nominate books in September and October after the close of the publication year 6 A panel of 12 children s librarians in CILIP s youth interest group YLG judges both the Carnegie and Greenaway books Currently the shortlist is announced in March and the winner in June between nine and 21 months after first U K publication 6 Candidates must be published in the U K during the preceding year September to August They must be published for young people and published in the U K originally or within three months in case of co publication English must be the language of any text or one of dual languages 5 All categories of illustrated books for children and young people are eligible 5 CILIP specifies numerous points of artistic style format and visual experience and also synergy of illustration and text that should be considered where applicable Furthermore The whole work should provide pleasure from a stimulating and satisfying visual experience which leaves a lasting impression Illustrated work needs to be considered primarily in terms of its graphic elements and where text exists particular attention should be paid to the synergy between the two 5 Winners editThrough 2023 there have been 67 Medals awarded in 68 years covering 1955 to 2022 publications approximately No eligible book published in 1955 or 1958 was considered suitable 3 From 2007 the medals are dated by the year of presentation previously by the calendar year of British publication which then defined the eligible works 3 named to the 50th Anniversary Top Ten in 2007 7 8 Medal winners 3 9 Date Illustrator Title Author if different Publisher2023 Jeet Zdung Saving Sorya Chang and the Sun Bear Trang Nguyen Kingfisher2022 Danica Novgorodoff Long Way Down Jason Reynolds Faber amp Faber2021 Sydney Smith Small in the City Walker Books2020 Shaun Tan Tales from the Inner City Walker Books2019 Jackie Morris The Lost Words Robert Macfarlane Hamish Hamilton2018 Sydney Smith Town is by the Sea Joanne Schwartz Walker Books2017 Lane Smith There is a Tribe of Kids Two Hoots2016 Chris Riddell The Sleeper and the Spindle Neil Gaiman Bloomsbury2015 William Grill Shackleton s Journey Flying Eye Books2014 Jon Klassen This Is Not My Hat Walker Books2013 Levi Pinfold Black Dog Templar2012 Jim Kay A Monster Calls Patrick Ness Walker Books2011 Grahame Baker Smith FArTHER Templar2010 Freya Blackwood Harry and Hopper Margaret Wild Scholastic2009 Catherine Rayner Harris Finds His Feet Little Tiger2008 Emily Gravett Little Mouse s Big Book of Fears Pan Macmillan2007 Mini Grey The Adventures of the Dish and the Spoon Jonathan Cape2006 The award date is the year of publication before 2006 the year of presentation after 2006 2005 Emily Gravett Wolves PanMacmillan2004 Chris Riddell Jonathan Swift s Gulliver Jonathan Swift 1726 adapted Walker Books2003 Shirley Hughes Ella s Big Chance Cinderella adapted Bodley Head2002 Bob Graham Jethro Byrde Fairy Child Walker Books2001 Chris Riddell Pirate Diary The Journal of Jake Carpenter Richard Platt informational Walker Books2000 Lauren Child I Will Never Not Ever Eat a Tomato Orchard Books1999 Helen Oxenbury Alice s Adventures in Wonderland Lewis Carroll 1865 Walker Books1998 Helen Cooper Pumpkin Soup Doubleday1997 P J Lynch When Jessie Came Across the Sea Amy Hest Walker Books1996 Helen Cooper The Baby Who Wouldn t Go To Bed Doubleday1995 P J Lynch The Christmas Miracle of Jonathan Toomey Susan Wojciechowski Walker Books1994 Gregory Rogers Way Home Libby Hathorn Andersen1993 Alan Lee Black Ships Before Troy Rosemary Sutcliff Frances Lincoln1992 Anthony Browne Zoo Julia MacRae1991 Janet Ahlberg The Jolly Christmas Postman Allan Ahlberg Heinemann1990 Gary Blythe The Whales Song Dyan Sheldon Hutchinson1989 Michael Foreman War Boy A Country Childhood autobiographical Pavilion1988 Barbara Firth Can t You Sleep Little Bear Martin Waddell Walker Books1987 Adrienne Kennaway Crafty Chameleon Mwenye Hadithi Hodder amp Stoughton1986 Fiona French Snow White in New York Oxford1985 Juan Wijngaard Sir Gawain and the Loathly Lady retold by Selina Hastings Walker Books1984 Errol Le Cain Hiawatha s Childhood Longfellow 1855 Faber1983 Anthony Browne Gorilla Julia MacRae1982 Michael Foreman Long Neck and Thunder Foot and Sleeping Beauty and other favourite fairy tales Helen Piers and traditional Kestrel Gollancz1981 Charles Keeping The Highwayman Alfred Noyes 1906 Oxford1980 Quentin Blake Mr Magnolia Jonathan Cape1979 Jan Pienkowski Haunted House Heinemann1978 Janet Ahlberg Each Peach Pear Plum Allan Ahlberg Kestrel1977 Shirley Hughes Dogger Bodley Head1976 Gail E Haley The Post Office Cat Bodley Head1975 Victor Ambrus Horses in Battle and Mishka nonfiction Oxford Oxford1974 Pat Hutchins The Wind Blew informational Bodley Head1973 Raymond Briggs Father Christmas Hamish Hamilton1972 Krystyna Turska The Woodcutter s Duck Hamish Hamilton1971 Jan Pienkowski The Kingdom Under the Sea and other stories retold by Joan Aiken Jonathan Cape1970 John Burningham Mr Gumpy s Outing Jonathan Cape1969 Helen Oxenbury The Quangle Wangle s Hat and The Dragon of an Ordinary Family Edward Lear unknown Margaret Mahy 1969 Heinemann Franklin Watts Heinemann1968 Pauline Baynes A Dictionary of Chivalry Grant Uden reference Longman1967 Charles Keeping Charley Charlotte and the Golden Canary Oxford1966 Raymond Briggs Mother Goose Treasury traditional Hamish Hamilton1965 Victor Ambrus The Three Poor Tailors Oxford Hamish Hamilton1964 C Walter Hodges Shakespeare s Theatre nonfiction Oxford1963 John Burningham Borka The Adventures of a Goose With No Feathers Jonathan Cape1962 Brian Wildsmith ABC also Brian Wildsmith s ABC no text Oxford1961 Antony Maitland Mrs Cockle s Cat Philippa Pearce Constable Longman1960 Gerald Rose Old Winkle and the Seagulls Elizabeth Rose Faber1959 William Stobbs Kashtanka and A Bundle of Ballads Anton Chekhov 1887 Ruth Manning Sanders from the Child Ballads Oxford Oxford1958 Prize withheld as no book considered suitable 1957 V H Drummond Mrs Easter and the Storks Faber1956 Edward Ardizzone Tim All Alone Oxford1955 Prize withheld as no book considered suitable Winners of multiple awards editOnly one illustrator Chris Riddell has won three Medals Fourteen other illustrators have won two of the 64 Medals awarded through 2021 The first winner of two Medals was John Burningham 1963 and 1970 The most recent is Sydney Smith in 2018 and 2021 Only A Monster Calls Walker Books 2011 by Patrick Ness and Jim Kay has won both the Carnegie and Greenaway Medals for writing and illustration 2012 In 2014 This is Not My Hat by Jon Klassen won both the Greenaway Medal and the American Caldecott Medal which recognises a picture book illustrated by a U S citizen or resident This is the first time the same book has won both medals 10 The recently common practice of co publication makes a double win possible Indeed This Is Not My Hat was released in Britain and America on the same day 9 October 2012 by Walker Books and its American subsidiary Candlewick Press 11 12 Gail E Haley was the first illustrator to win both medals albeit for different works the 1971 Caldecott for A Story a Story 1970 and the 1976 Greenaway for The Post Office Cat She also wrote both books Helen Oxenbury who won the 1969 and 1999 medals was also a Highly Commended runner up four times from 1989 to 1994 the distinction was used 31 times in 29 years to 2002 and no other illustrator was highly commended more than twice 13 Michael Foreman who won the 1982 and 1989 medals was highly commended once and four times a Commended runner up a distinction used 68 times in 44 years to 2002 13 Walker Books based in London with American subsidiary Candlewick Press in Somerville MA has published 10 of the 30 Greenaway Medal winning works from 1985 to 2014 10 50 year Greenaway of Greenaways 2007 editFor the 50th medal anniversary a CILIP posted online information about all of the winning works 1955 2005 and conducted a poll to identify the nation s favourite Kate Greenaway Medalist The public were invited to send in their nominations between 16 October and 1 December 2006 14 Polling was subsequently opened between 20 April and 14 June 2007 for ten shortlisted titles determined by a panel and the winner was announced on 21 June 2007 at the British Library 15 16 By less than one percentage point Dogger illustrated and written by Shirley Hughes 1977 outpolled Each Peach Pear Plum illustrated by Janet Ahlberg and written by Allan Ahlberg 1978 17 18 The nation and international voters too considered a ballot or all time shortlist comprising ten of the 50 Medal winning works selected by six children s book experts 19 The panel provided annotations including recommended ages that range from 1 to 10 years age 4 for the winner 19 50th Anniversary Top Ten Janet Ahlberg Each Peach Pear Plum Kestrel 1978 written by Allan Ahlberg Edward Ardizzone Tim All Alone Oxford 1956 Quentin Blake Mr Magnolia Jonathan Cape 1980 Raymond Briggs Father Christmas Hamish Hamilton 1973 Anthony Browne Gorilla Julia MacRae 1983 John Burningham Borka The Adventures of a Goose With No Feathers Jonathan Cape 1963 Lauren Child I Will Never Not Ever Eat a Tomato Orchard 2000 Shirley Hughes Dogger Bodley Head 1977 Charles Keeping The Highwayman Oxford 1981 an edition of the 1906 poem by Alfred Noyes Helen Oxenbury Alice s Adventures in Wonderland Walker 1999 an edition of the 1865 novel by Lewis CarrollShortlists and Honorees editHeadings give the official award dates years of publication before 2006 years of presentation after 2006 3 Prior to the 1990 s these listings cover only the Medalist and known Highly Commended or Commended books 13 20 1954 Carnegie MedalIllustrator Harold Jones received a Special Commendation for the 1954 Carnegie Medal for his part in Lavender s Blue A Book of Nursery Rhymes compiled by Kathleen Lines Oxford a 180 page collection named for Lavender s Blue which Oxford University Press has reprinted many times It was a major reason for the Library Association to establish the Kate Greenaway Medal that year 13 No 1955 work was judged worthy in 1956 so the Greenaway was actually inaugurated one year later recognising a 1956 publication 1955 to 1989 edit 1955 not awarded 1956 Edward Ardizzone Tim All Alone Oxford Ardizzone had inaugurated the Tim series in 1936 with Little Tim and the Brave Sea Captain Oxford its last sequel was Ships Cook Ginger 1977 Tim All Alone was named one of the top ten Medal winning works in 2007 8 1957 V H Drummond Mrs Easter and the Storks Faber 1958 not awarded No work was considered suitable the second and last time 1959 William Stobbs Kashtanka Oxford by Anton Chekhov 1887 and A Bundle of Ballads Oxford by Ruth Manning Sanders from the Child Ballads 19th century collection Edward Ardizzone Titus in Trouble Bodley Head by James Reeves Gerald Rose Wuffles Goes To Town Faber by Elizabeth RoseThe 1959 medal recognised two books the first of four such occasions to 1982 Two runners up were Commended a new distinction that would be used 99 times in 44 years to 2002 including 31 Highly Commended books that were named beginning 1974 13 1960 Gerald Rose Old Winkle and the Seagulls Faber by Elizabeth Rose no commendations 1961 Antony Maitland Mrs Cockle s Cat Constable Longman by Philippa Pearce no commendations 1962 Brian Wildsmith ABC Oxford Carol Barker Achilles the Donkey Dobson by H E BatesABC was Wildsmith s first book an alphabet book without any words commissioned by Mabel George at Oxford 1963 John Burningham Borka The Adventures of a Goose With No Feathers Jonathan Cape Victor Ambrus The Royal Navy Oxford by Peter Dawlish Victor Ambrus A Time of Trial Oxford by Hester Burton Brian Wildsmith The Lion and the Rat A Fable Oxford by Jean de La Fontaine 1668 from Aesop 6th century BCE Brian Wildsmith Oxford Book of Poetry for Children Oxford ed Edward BlishenBorka was Burningham s first book as an author or illustrator and it was named one of the top ten Medal winning works in 2007 8 1964 C Walter Hodges Shakespeare s Theatre Oxford nonfiction Raymond Briggs Fee Fi Fo Fum Hamish Hamilton Victor Ambrus for work in general William Papas for work in general b Hodges was a freelance illustrator a lover of theatre and an authority on theatre construction in Shakespeare s time Shakespeare s Theatre was the first nonfiction book cited for the medal Ambrus and Papas received the first and only commendations for work in general 1965 Victor Ambrus The Three Poor Tailors Oxford Hamish Hamilton no commendations The Three Poor Tailors was the first published book written by Ambrus who had illustrated dozens of fiction and nonfiction books for Oxford since immigrating from Hungary via Austria 1966 Raymond Briggs Mother Goose Treasury Hamish Hamilton traditional Doreen Roberts The Story of Saul the King Constable Oxford abridged from Helen Waddell Stories from Holy Writ 1949 1967 Charles Keeping Charley Charlotte and the Golden Canary Oxford William Papas The Church Oxford by Geoffrey Moorhouse William Papas No Mules Oxford Brian Wildsmith Birds Oxford 1968 Pauline Baynes A Dictionary of Chivalry Longman by Grant Uden reference Gaynor Chapman The Luck Child Based on a story of the Brothers Grimm Hamish Hamilton based on Brothers Grimm Shirley Hughes Flutes and Cymbals Poetry for the Young Bodley Head compiled by Leonard Clark William Papas A Letter from India Oxford b information book William Papas A Letter from Israel Oxford information book William Papas Taresh the tea planter Oxford Baynes alone has won the medal for illustrating a reference book only a few nonfiction or fictionalised information books have been cited The distinguished runners up were called Honours rather than Commended for 1968 1969 and perhaps 1970 1969 Helen Oxenbury The Quangle Wangle s Hat Heinemann Franklin Watts by Edward Lear late 19th century and The Dragon of an Ordinary Family Heinemann by Margaret Mahy Errol Le Cain The Cabbage Princess Faber Charles Keeping Joseph s Yard Longman The distinguished runners up were called Honours again 1970 John Burningham Mr Gumpy s Outing Jonathan Cape Charles Keeping The God Beneath the Sea Longman by Leon Garfield and Edward Blishen Jan Pienkowski The Golden Bird J M Dent by Edith Brill Krystyna Turska Pegasus Hamish Hamilton the myth of Pegasus and Bellerophon retold by TurskaBurningham became the first to win two medals 1963 and 1970 one year after his wife Helen Oxenbury won her first of two As of 2012 fourteen illustrators have won two Greenaways none three Garfield and Blishen won the companion Carnegie Medal for The God Beneath the Sea For more than fifty years until 2012 no single book won both of the CILIP awards 1971 Jan Pienkowski The Kingdom under the Sea and other stories Jonathan Cape retold by Joan Aiken Victor Ambrus The Sultan s Bath Oxford Brian Wildsmith The Owl and the Woodpecker Oxford One source calls these two runners up Highly Commended They would be the first 21 1972 Krystyna Turska The Woodcutter s Duck Hamish Hamilton Carol Barker King Midas and the Golden Touch Franklin Watts a version of the Midas myth Pauline Baynes Snail and Caterpillar Longman by Helen Piers Antony Maitland The Ghost Downstairs Longman by Leon Garfield1973 Raymond Briggs Father Christmas Hamish Hamilton Fiona French King Tree Oxford Errol Lloyd My Brother Sean Bodley Head by Petronella BreinburgBriggs introduced the grumpy old man with a challenging lonely job to be continued in Father Christmas Goes on Holiday Father Christmas was named one of the top ten Medal winning works in 2007 8 1974 Pat Hutchins The Wind Blew Bodley Head Mitsumasa Anno Anno s Alphabet Bodley Head Charles Keeping Railway Passage Oxford The Wind Blew has been called informative meteorological poetry citation needed According to answers com citing Gale Biographies Anno s Alphabet was ineligible for the medal with its Japanese author and original publisher 1975 Victor Ambrus Horses in Battle Oxford and Mishka Oxford Shirley Hughes Helpers Bodley Head Errol Le Cain Thorn Rose or the Sleeping Beauty Faber from Brothers GrimmAmbrus won his second medal Horses in Battle nonfiction or fictionalised history is the latest information book to be cited except for one Pirate Diary 2001 22 1976 Gail E Haley The Post Office Cat Bodley Head Graham Oakley The Church Mice Adrift Macmillan fifth of 12 Church Mice books Maureen Roffey Tinker Tailor Soldier Sailor Bodley Head by Bernard Lodge Joanna Troughton How the Birds Changed Their Feathers Blackie Folk Tales of the World retold and illustrated by Troughton Haley had won the 1971 Caldecott Medal U S and moved to the U K in 1973 No one else has won both medals which CILIP rules and co publication enable in the 21st century 1977 Shirley Hughes Dogger Bodley Head Janet Ahlberg Burglar Bill Heinemann by Allan Ahlberg Mary Rayner Garth Pig and the Ice Cream Lady Macmillan Dogger was named one of the top ten Medal winning works in 2007 and was voted the public favourite from that slate 8 1978 Janet Ahlberg Each Peach Pear Plum Kestrel by Allan Ahlberg Raymond Briggs The Snowman Hamish Hamilton no text Michael Foreman Popular Folk Tales Gollancz newly translated from Brothers Grimm by Brian Alderson Errol Le Cain The Twelve Dancing Princesses Faber retold from Brothers Grimm by Le CainEach Peach Pear Plum was named one of the top ten Medal winning works in 2007 and finished a close second in public voting on that slate 8 1979 Jan Pienkowski The Haunted House Heinemann Quentin Blake The Wild Washerwomen A new folk tale by John Yeoman Pat Hutchins One Eyed Jack Pienkowski won his second medal 1980 Quentin Blake Mr Magnolia Jonathan Cape Beryl Cook Seven Years and a Day Collins by Colette O Hare Michael Foreman City of Gold and other stories from the Old Testament Gollancz retold by Peter Dickinson Jill Murphy Peace at Last Mister Magnolia was named one of the top ten Medal winning works in 2007 8 Dickinson won the companion Carnegie Medal for City of Gold For more than fifty years until 2012 no single book won both of the CILIP awards 1981 Charles Keeping The Highwayman Oxford an edition of the 1906 poem by Alfred Noyes Nicola Bayley The Patchwork Cat Jonathan Cape by William Mayne Jan Ormerod Sunshine Kestrel Keeping won his second medal The Highwayman was named one of the top ten Medal winning works in 2007 8 1982 Michael Foreman Long Neck and Thunder Foot Kestrel by Helen Piers and Sleeping Beauty and other favourite fairy tales Gollancz selected and translated by Angela Carter Janet Ahlberg The Baby s Catalogue by Allan Ahlberg Graham Oakley The Church Mice in Action Macmillan eighth of twelve Church Mice booksThe 1982 medal recognised two books the last of four times from 1959 Sleeping Beauty also won the inaugural Kurt Maschler Award for children s book text and illustration integrated so that each enhances and balances the other 23 Oakley and the Church Mice series were highly commended for the second time the first double recognition for a series books five and eight Subsequently Janet Ahlberg Jolly Postman series and Chris Riddell Diary series were runners up for the first books and medalists for the sequels 1983 Anthony Browne Gorilla Julia MacRae Molly Bang Ten Nine Eight a counting book Michael Foreman The Saga of Erik the Viking Pavilion by Terry Jones Ron Maris My Book Julia MacRae Gorilla was named one of the top ten Medal winning works in 2007 8 It also won the annual Kurt Maschler Award for integrated text and illustration 23 Ten Nine Eight was also a runner up for the U S Caldecott Medal Honour Book 1984 Errol Le Cain Hiawatha s Childhood Faber a section of the 1855 poem by Longfellow no commendations 1985 Juan Wijngaard Sir Gawain and the Loathly Lady Walker retold by Selina Hastings Michael Foreman Seasons of Splendour Tales myths and legends of India Pavilion by Madhur Jaffrey Gillian McClure Tog the Ribber or Granny s Tale Andre Deutsch poem by Paul Coltman1986 Fiona French Snow White in New York Oxford Janet Ahlberg The Jolly Postman Heinemann by Allan Ahlberg Paddy Bouma Are We Nearly There Bodley Head by Louis Baum Babette Cole Princess Smartypants Jan Ormerod Happy Christmas Gemma Walker by Sarah Hayes Fiona Pragoff How Many From 0 to 20 Gollancz Tony Ross I Want My Potty the first Little Princess bookThe Ahlbergs won the Emils for The Jolly Postman Kurt Maschler Award 23 1987 Adrienne Kennaway Crafty Chameleon Hodder amp Stoughton by Mwenye Hadithi Babette Cole Prince Cinders Errol Le Cain The Enchanter s Daughter Jonathan Cape by Antonia Barber Jill Murphy All in One Piece 1988 Barbara Firth Can t You Sleep Little Bear Walker by Martin Waddell Ruth Brown Ladybird Ladybird Andersen a traditional rhyme Anthony Browne Alice s Adventures in Wonderland an edition of the 1865 classic by Lewis Carroll Penny Dale Wake Up Mr B Walker Roberto Innocenti The Adventures of Pinocchio Creative Education an edition of the 1883 classic by Carlo Collodi Alan Lee Merlin Dreams by Peter DickinsonBrowne won an Emil for this edition of Alice Kurt Maschler Award 23 Special 1988 commendation David Burnie Bird Dorling Kindersley in association with the National History Museum 24 1989 Michael Foreman War Boy a Country Childhood Pavilion autobiographical Helen Oxenbury We re Going on a Bear Hunt Walker retold by Michael RosenForeman won his second medal Oxenbury was highly commended for the first of four times 1990s edit In 1991 Janet Ahlberg won her second medal both for books that were husband and wife collaborations The Jolly Christmas Postman was the second of three interactive Jolly Postman books the last would be published posthumously Janet Ahlberg is one of three people to be commended for the Greenaway Medal at least for two books in a series 1992 saw Anthony Browne win his second medal on this occasion for Zoo written by Julia MacRae In 1993 Michael Foreman was a distinguished runner up for the fifth time once highly commended In 1994 Helen Oxenbury was the lone Highly Commended runner up for the fourth time in six years The distinction would be used 31 times in 29 years to 2002 Oxenbury and author Trish Cooke would also win the Emils Kurt Maschler Award for So Much 23 In 1995 Patrick Benson and author Kathy Henderson won the Emils Kurt Maschler Award for The Little Boat 23 1997 1998 and 1999 marked second medal wins for three different illustrators In 1997 P J Lynch won for the second time with When Jessie Came Across the Sea and in 1998 Helen Cooper did the same with Pumpkin Soup The final year of the decade saw Helen Oxenbury win her second Greenaway Medal for Alice s Adventures in Wonderland which would go onto be named one of the top ten Medal winning works in 2007 8 Oxenbury also won her second Emil Kurt Maschler Award which were subsequently discontinued having run from 1982 to 1999 23 Colour key Medal Winner Highly commended CommendedMedal winners Commendations and Shortlists 1990 1999 Year Illustrator Title Publisher Author if different Result Ref 1990 Gary Blythe The Whales Song Hutchinson Dyan Sheldon Winner 13 Tony Ross Dr Xargle s Book of Earth Tiggers Andersen Press Jeanne Willis Highly commended 13 Nicola Bayley The Mousehole Cat Walker Books Antonia Barber Commended 13 Roberto Innocenti A Christmas Carol Creative Education an edition of the 1843 classic by Charles Dickens Commended 13 Penny Dale Rosie s Babies Walker Books Martin Waddell Shortlist 25 26 Kim Lewis The Shepherd Boy Walker Books Shortlist 25 Jane Ray Noah s Ark Orchard Books Shortlist 27 1991 Janet Ahlberg The Jolly Christmas Postman Heinemann Allan Ahlberg Winner 13 Helen Oxenbury Farmer Duck Walker Books Martin Waddell Highly commended 13 Caroline Binch Amazing Grace Dial Mary Hoffman Commended 13 Jeannie Baker Window Julia MacRae no text Shortlist 28 Fiona French Anancy and Mr Dry Bone Frances Lincoln Shortlist 28 P J Lynch East o the Sun and West o the Moon Walker Books translated by George W Dasent Shortlist 28 Jane Ray The Story of Christmas Orchard Books Shortlist 28 1992 Anthony Browne Zoo Julia MacRae Winner 13 Jill Barton The Pig in the Pond Walker Books Martin Waddell Highly commended 13 Caroline Binch Hue Boy Dial Rita Phillips Mitchell Highly commended 13 Stephen Biesty Incredible Cross Sections Dorling Kindersley Richard Platt Shortlist 29 Robert Ingpen Treasure Island Dragon s World an edition of the 1883 classic by Robert Louis Stevenson Shortlist 25 Francesca Martin The Honey Hunters Walker Books Shortlist 25 Korky Paul The Dog That Dug Bodley Head Jonathan Long Shortlist 30 1993 Alan Lee Black Ships Before Troy Frances Lincoln Rosemary Sutcliff Winner 13 Helen Oxenbury The Three Little Wolves and the Big Bad Pig Heinemann Young Books Eugene Trivizas Highly commended 13 Michael Foreman War Game Pavilion Commended 13 Angela Barrett Beware Beware Walker Books Susan Hill Shortlist 31 Gary Blythe The Garden Hutchinson Dyan Sheldon Shortlist 31 Helen Cooper The Bear Under the Stairs Doubleday Shortlist 31 Jill Murphy A Quiet Night In Walker Books Shortlist 31 1994 Gregory Rogers Way Home Andersen Press Libby Hathorn Winner 13 Helen Oxenbury So Much Walker Books Trish Cooke Highly commended 13 Chris Riddell Something Else Puffin Kathryn Cave Commended 13 Caroline Binch Gregory Cool Frances Lincoln Shortlist 32 Anthony Browne King Kong Julia MacRae from the 1932 novelised story of King Kong Shortlist 32 Paul Geraghty The Hunter Hutchinson Shortlist 32 P J Lynch Catkin Walker Books Antonia Barber Shortlist 32 Jane Ray The Happy Prince Orchard Books from the fairy tale by Oscar Wilde Shortlist 32 1995 P J Lynch The Christmas Miracle of Jonathan Toomey Walker Books Susan Wojciechowski Winner 13 Patrick Benson The Little Boat Walker Books Kathy Henderson Highly commended 13 Quentin Blake Clown Jonathan Cape Commended 13 Christina Balit Blodin the Beast Frances Lincoln Michael Morpurgo Shortlist 33 Ken Brown Tattybogle Andersen Press Sandra Horn Shortlist 33 Mick Inkpen Nothing Hodder Shortlist 33 Colin McNaughton Here Come the Aliens Walker Books Shortlist 33 1996 Helen Cooper The Baby Who Wouldn t Go To Bed Doubleday Winner 13 34 Caroline Binch Down by the River Heinemann Grace Hallworth Highly commended 13 34 Christina Balit Ishtar and Tammuz A Babylonian myth of the seasons Frances Lincoln retold by Christopher Moore Commended 13 34 Ruth Brown The Tale of the Monstrous Toad Andersen Press Shortlist 35 Susan Field The Smallest Whale Orchard Books Elisabeth Beresford Shortlist 35 Debi Gliori Mr Bear to the Rescue Orchard Books Shortlist 35 Colin McNaughton Oops Andersen Press Shortlist 35 Korky Paul The Duck That Had No Luck Bodley Head Jonathan Long Shortlist 35 1997 P J Lynch When Jessie Came Across the Sea Walker Books Amy Hest Winner 13 Bob Graham Queenie the Bantam Walker Books Highly commended 13 Charlotte Voake Ginger Walker Books Highly commended 13 Ken Brown Mucky Pup Andersen Press Shortlist 36 Anthony Browne Willy the Dreamer Walker Books Shortlist 36 Peter Collington A Small Miracle Jonathan Cape no text Shortlist 36 Clare Mackie Book of Nonsense Macdonald Young Books Michael Rosen Shortlist 36 Sophie Windham Unicorns Unicorns Hutchinson Geraldine McCaughrean Shortlist 36 1998 Helen Cooper Pumpkin Soup Doubleday Winner 13 Shirley Hughes The Lion and the Unicorn Bodley Head Highly commended 13 Jane Simmons Come on Daisy Orchard Books Highly commended 13 Christian Birmingham The Lion the Witch and the Wardrobe HarperCollins an edition of the 1950 classic by C S Lewis Shortlist 37 Quentin Blake Zagazoo Jonathan Cape Shortlist 37 Anthony Browne Voices in the Park Doubleday Shortlist 37 Emma Chichester Clark I Love You Blue Kangaroo Andersen Press Shortlist 37 1999 Helen Oxenbury Alice s Adventures in Wonderland Walker Books an edition of the 1865 classic by Lewis Carroll Winner 13 Lauren Child Clarice Bean That s Me Orchard Books Highly commended 13 Chris Riddell Castle Diary The Journal of Tobias Burgess Page Walker Books Richard Platt Highly commended 13 Kevin Hawkes Weslandia Walker Books Paul Fleischman Commended 13 Patrick Benson The Sea Thing Child Walker Books Russell Hoban Shortlist 38 Christian Birmingham Wombat Goes Walkabout HarperCollins Michael Morpurgo Shortlist 38 Kathy Henderson The Storm Walker Books Shortlist 38 Simon James Days Like This Walker Books Shortlist 38 2000s edit Thanks to a bequest left in 2000 by children s book and illustration collector Colin Mears the winner now receives a cheque for 5000 along with the Greenaway Medal The winning book in the year 2000 I Will Never Not Ever Eat a Tomato was named one of the top ten Medal winning works in 2007 and ranked third in public voting from that slate 18 In 2001 Pirate Diary became the latest information book to be cited for the medal and the first since 1975 22 It was the second in a series of four first person journals inaugurated by Richard Platt and Chris Riddell in 1999 Castle Diary and continued by Platt with another illustrator Riddell was the third and latest illustrator to be at least commended for the Greenaway for books in a series following Graham Oakley Church Mice 1976 and 1982 and Janet Ahlberg Jolly Postman 1986 and 1991 2002 saw Bob Graham become the first medalist from Australia Lauren Child was the last Commended or Highly Commended runner up there had been 99 such distinctions over 44 years Twenty six years after her first medal 2003 marked a second win for Shirley Hughes and Ella s Big Chance a retelling of Cinderella Commendations ceased to be awarded in this year Since 2003 there have usually been eight books on the shortlist In 2004 Chris Riddell was awarded his second medal this time for Jonathan Swift s Gulliver In this year there were only 7 shortlisted books Wolves by Emily Gravett in its U S edition was Gravett s first book as author or illustrator just one year out of college She won the 49th Greenaway Medal awarded in its 51st year 2005 Three years later in 2008 when once again there were only 7 shortlisted nominations Emily Gravett won her second medal for her fourth book with the cover title Little Mouse s Emily Gravett s Big Book of Fears Colour key Medal Winner Highly commended CommendedMedal winners Commendations and Shortlists 2000 2009 Year Illustrator Title Publisher Author if different Result Ref 2000 Lauren Child I Will Never Not Ever Eat a Tomato Orchard Books Winner 39 40 41 Anthony Browne Willy s Pictures Highly commended 13 Ted Dewan Crispin The Pig Who Had It All Transworld Commended 13 Ruth Brown Snail Trail Shortlist 42 Lauren Child Beware of the Storybook Wolves Hodder Children s Books Shortlist 42 Jane Ray Fairy Tales Walker Books Berlie Doherty Shortlist 42 2001 Chris Riddell Pirate Diary The Journal of Jake Carpenter Walker Books Richard Platt Winner 43 44 Jez Alborough Fix it Duck Picture Lions Highly commended 43 Charles Fuge Sometimes I Like to Curl Up in a Ball Gullane Vicki Churchill Highly commended 43 Russell Ayto The Witch s Children Orchard Books Ursula Jones Shortlist 45 Nicola Bayley Katje the Windmill Cat Walker Books Gretchen Woelfle Shortlist 45 Caroline Binch Silver Shoes Dorling Kindersley Shortlist 45 Helen Cooper Tatty Ratty Doubleday Shortlist 45 Bob Graham Let s Get a Pup Walker Books Shortlist 45 2002 Bob Graham Jethro Byrde Fairy Child Walker Books Winner 46 47 48 Lauren Child That Pesky Rat Orchard Books Commended 49 Simon Bartram Man on the Moon Templar Shortlist 50 51 Nick Butterworth Albert le Blanc Collins Shortlist 50 51 Lauren Child Who s Afraid of the Big Bad Book Hodder Shortlist 50 51 David Melling The Kiss That Missed Hodder Shortlist 50 51 Nick Sharratt Pants David Fickling Books Giles Andrae Shortlist 50 51 Helen Ward The Cockerel and the Fox Templar a retelling of Chanticleer and the Fox Shortlist 50 51 2003 Shirley Hughes Ella s Big Chance Bodley Head a retelling of Cinderella Winner 52 53 54 Anthony Browne The Shape Game Doubleday Shortlist 55 Alexis Deacon Beegu Hutchinson Shortlist 55 Debi Gliori Always and Forever Doubleday Alan Durant Shortlist 55 Mini Grey The Pea and the Princess Red Fox a retelling of The Princess and the Pea Shortlist 55 Dave McKean The Wolves in the Walls Bloomsbury Neil Gaiman Shortlist 55 Bee Willey Bob Robber and Dancing Jane Jonathan Cape Andrew Matthews Shortlist 55 Chris Wormell Two Frogs Red Fox Jonathan Cape Shortlist 55 2004 Chris Riddell Jonathan Swift s Gulliver Walker Books the 1726 classic Gulliver s Travels adapted by Martin Jenkins Winner 56 57 58 Ian Andrew The Boat Templar Helen Ward Shortlist 59 Russell Ayto One More Sheep Hodder Mij Kelly Shortlist 59 Simon Bartram Dougal s Deep Sea Diary Templar Shortlist 59 Quentin Blake Michael Rosen s Sad Book Walker Books Michael Rosen Shortlist 59 Nick Butterworth The Whisperer HarperCollins Shortlist 59 John Kelly Guess Who s Coming For Dinner Templar Cathy Tincknell Shortlist 59 2005 Emily Gravett Wolves Pan Macmillan Winner 60 61 Tony DiTerlizzi Arthur Spiderwick s Field Guide to the Fantastical World Around You Simon amp Schuster Holly Black Shortlist 62 63 Mini Grey Traction Man is Here Red Fox Shortlist 62 63 Oliver Jeffers Lost and Found HarperCollins Shortlist 62 63 Dave McKean Mirrormask Bloomsbury Neil Gaiman Shortlist 62 63 Jane Ray Jinnie Ghost Frances Lincoln Berlie Doherty Shortlist 62 63 David Roberts Little Red A Fizzingly Good Yarn Abrams Books Lynn Roberts Shortlist 62 63 Rob Scotton Russell the Sheep HarperCollins Shortlist 62 63 2006 After 2006 the awards year was adjusted Before 2007 the year refers to when the book was published rather than when the medal was awarded i e the 2005 winner was announced and the medal presented in July 2006 2007 Mini Grey The Adventures of the Dish and the Spoon Jonathan Cape Winner 64 17 Ross Collins The Elephantom Templar Shortlist 65 Emily Gravett Orange Pear Apple Bear Pan Macmillan four words only Shortlist 65 John Kelly and Cathy Tincknell Scoop An Exclusive by Monty Molenski Templar Shortlist 65 Catherine Rayner Augustus and His Smile Little Tiger Shortlist 65 Chris Riddell The Emperor of Absurdia Pan Macmillan Shortlist 65 2008 Emily Gravett Little Mouse s Big Book of Fears Pan Macmillan Winner 66 67 Anthony Browne Silly Billy Walker Books Shortlist 68 69 Polly Dunbar Penguin Walker Books Shortlist 68 69 Emily Gravett Monkey and Me Pan Macmillan Shortlist 68 69 Jane Ray The Lost Happy Endings Bloomsbury Carol Ann Duffy Shortlist 68 69 Chris Riddell Ottoline and the Yellow Cat Pan Macmillan Shortlist 68 69 Ed Vere Banana Puffin Books Shortlist 68 69 2009 Catherine Rayner Harris Finds His Feet Little Tiger Winner 70 71 Angela Barrett The Snow Goose Hutchinson an edition of the 1941 novella by Paul Gallico Shortlist 72 73 Marc Craste Varmints Templar Helen Ward Shortlist 72 73 Thomas Docherty Little Boat Templar Shortlist 72 73 Bob Graham How to Heal a Broken Wing Walker Books Shortlist 72 73 Oliver Jeffers The Way Back Home HarperCollins Shortlist 72 73 Dave McKean The Savage Walker Books David Almond Shortlist 72 73 Chris Wormell Molly and the Night Monster Jonathan Cape Shortlist 72 73 2010s edit In 2012 Jim Kay and Patrick Ness won both the Greenaway and Carnegie Medals for A Monster Calls the first such double Prior to this two illustrators of Carnegie Medal winning books had been runners up for the Greenaway namely Charles Keeping The God Beneath the Sea 1970 and Michael Foreman City of Gold 1980 2014 marked the first time that the same book had won both the Greenaway and Caldecott medals having won the latter in 2013 10 74 The winner Jon Klassen the first Greenaway medalist from Canada was shortlisted for two separate publications 75 In this year the shortlist comprised only seven nominations as opposed to the usual slate of eight In 2016 Chris Riddell became the first triple medalist in the history of the award having also previously won in 2001 and 2004 From 2016 to 2018 an additional award The Amnesty CLIP Honour was bestowed upon a shortlisted entry in conjunction with Amnesty International for books that most distinctively illuminate uphold or celebrate freedoms 76 In 2016 There s a Bear on My Chair received the inaugural honour 77 and in 2017 the winner was The Journey illustrated and written by Italian artist Francesca Sanna which followed a family of refugees 78 79 In 2018 Levi Penfold received the honour for his black and white illustrations in The Song from Somewhere Else 80 In 2018 there were only seven shortlisted nominees as opposed to the usual slate of eight The winner Sydney Smith would go on to win again in 2021 In 2019 the Amnesty CLIP Honour was superseded by the Shadowers Choice Award voted for and awarded by children and young people who shadow the Medals 81 82 Colour key Medal Winner Amnesty CLIP Honour 2016 2018 and Shadowers Choice Award 2019 winner if different from Medal winnerMedal winners and Shortlists 2010 2019 Year Illustrator Title Publisher Author if different Result Ref 2010 Freya Blackwood Harry and Hopper Scholastic Margaret Wild Winner 83 84 85 Grahame Baker Smith Leon and the Place Between Templar Angela McAllister Shortlist 86 87 Oliver Jeffers The Great Paper Caper HarperCollins Shortlist 86 87 Satoshi Kitamura Millie s Marvellous Hat Andersen Shortlist 86 87 Dave McKean Crazy Hair Bloomsbury Neil Gaiman Shortlist 86 87 Chris Riddell The Graveyard Book Bloomsbury Neil Gaiman Shortlist 86 87 David Roberts The Dunderheads Walker Books Paul Fleischman Shortlist 86 87 Viviane Schwarz There Are Cats in This Book Walker Books Shortlist 86 87 2011 Grahame Baker Smith FArTHER Templar Winner 88 89 Anthony Browne Me and You Doubleday Shortlist 90 91 Bob Graham April Underhill Tooth Fairy Walker Books Shortlist 90 91 Mini Grey Jim Jonathan Cape Hilaire Belloc 1907 Shortlist 90 91 Oliver Jeffers The Heart and the Bottle HarperCollins Shortlist 90 91 Kristin Oftedal Big Bear Little Brother Pan Macmillan Carl Norac Shortlist 90 91 Catherine Rayner Ernest Pan Macmillan Shortlist 90 91 Juan Wijngaard Cloud Tea Monkeys Walker Books Mal Peet and Elspeth Graham Shortlist 90 91 2012 Jim Kay A Monster Calls Walker Books Patrick Ness Winner 92 93 94 Emily Gravett Wolf Won t Bite Pan Macmillan Shortlist 95 96 97 Petr Horacek Puffin Peter Walker Books Shortlist 95 96 97 Dave McKean Slog s Dad Walker Books David Almond Shortlist 95 96 97 Catherine Rayner Solomon Crocodile Pan Macmillan Shortlist 95 96 97 Rob Ryan The Gift Barefoot Books Carol Ann Duffy Shortlist 95 96 97 Viviane Schwarz There Are No Cats in This Book Walker Books Shortlist 95 96 97 Vicky White Can We Save the Tiger nonfiction Walker Books Martin Jenkins Shortlist 95 96 97 2013 Levi Pinfold Black Dog Templar Winner 98 99 Rebecca Cobb Lunchtime Pan Macmillan Shortlist 100 101 102 Emily Gravett Again Pan Macmillan Shortlist 100 101 102 Chris Haughton Oh No George Walker Books Shortlist 100 101 102 Jon Klassen I Want My Hat Back Walker Books Shortlist 100 101 102 Chris Mould Pirates n Pistols Hodder Shortlist 100 101 102 Helen Oxenbury King Jack and the Dragon Puffin Books Peter Bently Shortlist 100 101 102 Salvatore Rubbino Just Ducks Walker Books Nicola Davies Shortlist 100 101 102 2014 Jon Klassen This is Not My Hat Walker Books Winner 103 104 105 Rebecca Cobb The Paper Dolls Pan Macmillan Julia Donaldson Shortlist 106 107 108 Olivia Gill Where My Wellies Take Me Templar Michael Morpurgo and Clare Morpurgo Shortlist 106 107 108 Oliver Jeffers The Day the Crayons Quit HarperCollins Drew Daywalt Shortlist 106 107 108 Jon Klassen The Dark Orchard Books Lemony Snicket Shortlist 106 107 108 Dave McKean Mouse Bird Snake Wolf Walker Books David Almond Shortlist 106 107 108 Birgitta Sif Oliver Walker Books Shortlist 106 107 108 2015 William Grill Shackleton s Journey Flying Eye Books Winner 109 110 111 Laura Carlin The Promise Walker Books Nicola Davies Shortlist 112 113 114 Alexis Deacon Jim s Lion Walker Books Russell Hoban Shortlist 112 113 114 John Higgins and Marc Olivent Dark Satanic Mills Walker Books Marcus Sedgwick and Julian Sedgwick Shortlist 112 113 114 Catherine Rayner Smelly Louie Pan Macmillan Shortlist 112 113 114 Chris Riddell Goth Girl and the Ghost of a Mouse Pan Macmillan Shortlist 112 113 114 David Roberts Tinder Orion Books Sally Gardner Shortlist 112 113 114 Shaun Tan Rules of Summer Lothian Publishing Shortlist 112 113 114 2016 Chris Riddell The Sleeper and the Spindle Bloomsbury Neil Gaiman Winner 115 Ross Collins There s a Bear on My Chair Nosy Crow Shortlist and Amnesty CILIP Honoree 116 117 Anthony Browne Willy s Stories Walker Books Shortlist 116 117 Oliver Jeffers Once Upon an Alphabet HarperCollins Shortlist 116 117 Jon Klassen Sam amp Dave Dig a Hole Walker Books Mac Barnett Shortlist 116 117 Jackie Morris Something About a Bear Frances Lincoln Shortlist 116 117 Helen Oxenbury Captain Jack and the Pirates Puffin Books Peter Bently Shortlist 116 117 Sydney Smith Footpath Flowers Walker Books JonArno Lawson Shortlist 116 117 2017 Lane Smith There is a Tribe of Kids Two Hoots Winner 79 Francesca Sanna The Journey Flying Eye Books Shortlist and Amnesty CILIP Honoree 118 119 Dieter Braun Wild Animals of the North Flying Eye Books Shortlist 118 119 Emily Gravett Tidy Two Hoots Shortlist 118 119 William Grill The Wolves of Currumpaw Flying Eye Books Shortlist 118 119 Jim Kay Harry Potter and the Philosopher s Stone Bloomsbury J K Rowling Shortlist 118 119 Chris Riddell A Great Big Cuddle Walker Books Michael Rosen Shortlist 118 119 Brian Selznick The Marvels Scholastic Shortlist 118 119 2018 Sydney Smith Town is by the Sea Walker Books Joanne Schwartz Winner 120 Levi Pinfold The Song from Somewhere Else Bloomsbury A F Harrold Shortlist and Amnesty CILIP Honoree 121 122 Laura Carlin King of the Sky Walker Books Nicola Davies Shortlist 121 122 Debi Gliori Night Shift Hot Key Books Shortlist 121 122 Petr Horacek A First Book of Animals Walker Books Nicola Davies Shortlist 121 122 Pam Smy Thornhill David Fickling Books Shortlist 121 122 Britta Teckentrup Under the Same Sky Little Tiger Shortlist 121 122 2019 Jackie Morris The Lost Words Hamish Hamilton Robert Macfarlane Winner amp Shadowers Choice Award 123 Jon Klassen The Wolf the Duck and the Mouse Walker Books Mac Barnett Shortlist 124 125 Rebecca Cobb The Day War Came Walker Books Nicola Davies Shortlist 124 125 Eric Fan and Terry Fan Ocean Meets Sky Frances Lincoln Shortlist 124 125 Maria Gulemetova Beyond the Fence Child s Play Shortlist 124 125 Jessica Love Julian is a Mermaid Walker Books Shortlist 124 125 Poonam Mistry You re Safe With Me Lantana Publishing Chitra Soundar Shortlist 124 125 David Roberts Suffragette The Battle for Equality Two Hoots Shortlist 124 125 2020s edit In 2020 Australian artist Shaun Tan became first BAME author to win the Greenaway Medal in its 64 year history 126 In 2022 Long Way Down by Danica Novgorodoff became the first graphic novel to win the medal since Raymond Briggs Father Christmas in 1973 127 The 2023 medal also went to a graphic novel 128 In that year there were only six shortlisted nominees as opposed to the usual slate of eight Colour key Medal Winner Shadowers Choice Award winner if different from Medal winnerMedal winners and Shortlists 2020 Year Illustrator Title Publisher Author if different Result Ref 2020 Shaun Tan Tales from the Inner City Walker Books Winner 129 126 Kadir Nelson The Undefeated Andersen Press Kwame Alexander Shortlist amp Shadowers Choice Award 130 131 Poonam Mistry You re Snug with Me Lantana Publishing Chitra Soundar Shortlist 130 131 Chris Mould The Iron Man Faber amp Faber Ted Hughes Shortlist 130 131 Chris Naylor Ballesteros The Suitcase Nosy Crow Shortlist 130 131 Levi Pinfold The Dam Walker Books David Almond Shortlist 130 131 Julia Sarda Mary and Frankenstein Andersen Press Linda Bailey Shortlist 130 131 Beth Waters Child of St Kilda Child s Play Shortlist 130 131 2021 Sydney Smith Small in the City Walker Books Winner 132 133 Sharon King Chai Starbird Two Hoots Shortlist amp Shadowers Choice Award 134 135 Sara Lundberg The Bird Within Me Book Island translated by B J Epstein Shortlist 134 135 Kate Milner It s a No Money Day Barrington Stoke Shortlist 134 135 Poonam Mistry How The Stars Came To Be Tate Publishing Shortlist 134 135 Pete Oswald Hike Walker Books Shortlist 134 135 David Ouimet I Go Quiet Canongate Shortlist 134 135 Catherine Rayner Arlo The Lion Who Couldn t Sleep Pan Macmillan Shortlist 134 135 2022 Danica Novgorodoff Long Way Down Faber amp Faber Jason Reynolds Winner 127 136 Mariachiara Di Giorgio The Midnight Fair Walker Books Gideon Sterer Shortlist amp Shadowers Choice Award 137 138 George Butler Drawn Across Borders Walker Books Shortlist 137 138 Emily Gravett Too Much Stuff Pan Macmillan Shortlist 137 138 Christian Robinson Milo Imagines the World Pan Macmillan Matt de la Pena Shortlist 137 138 Yu Rong Shu Lin s Grandpa Otter Barry Books Matt Goodfellow Shortlist 137 138 Sydney Smith I Talk Like a River Walker Books Jordan Scott Shortlist 137 138 Peter Van den Ende The Wanderer Pushkin Children s Books no text Shortlist 137 138 2023 Jeet Zdung Saving Sorya Chang and the Sun Bear Kingfisher Trang Nguyen Winner 128 139 Joe Todd Stanton The Comet Flying Eye Books Shortlist amp Shadowers Choice Award 140 Flora Delargy Rescuing Titanic Wide Eyed Editions Shortlist 140 Benjamin Phillips Alte Zachen Old Things Cicada Ziggy Hanaor Shortlist 140 Levi Pinfold The Worlds We Leave Behind Bloomsbury Children s Books A F Harrold Shortlist 140 Yu Rong The Visible Sounds UCLan Jianling Yin Shortlist 140 2024 Aaron Becker The Tree and the River Walker Books Shortlist 141 Catalina Echeverri April s Garden Graffeg Isla McGuckin Shortlist 141 Mariajo Ilustrajo Lost Quarto Shortlist 141 Steve McCarthy The Wilderness Walker Books Shortlist 141 Erika Meza To the Other Side Hachette Shortlist 141 Poonam Mistry The Midnight Panther Bonnier Shortlist 141 Catherine Rayner The Bowerbird Macmillan Julia Donaldson Shortlist 141 Chloe Savage The Search for the Giant Arctic Jellyfish Walker Books Shortlist 141 See also edit nbsp Children s literature portal nbsp Visual arts portalCarnegie Medal Kurt Maschler Award the Emil Mother Goose Award Caldecott Medal the premier American Library Association award for picture book illustration Comics Literacy AwarenessNotes edit The companion Carnegie Medal was inaugurated in 1937 for the 1936 publication year so its 70th anniversary genuinely underlay the 2007 celebration of both awards Carnegie history then covered seventy years of children s book publication 1936 2005 That was also the 50th anniversary of the first Greenaway Medal awarded but only because no work was judged suitable in the Greenaway s first year Greenaway history then covered fifty one publication years 1955 2005 a b Papas was a Commended runner up for the 1964 1967 and 1968 Greenaway Medals recognising the year s best work s of illustration for children CCSU lists no single book commended for 1964 rather Papas commended for work in general two for 1967 The Church and No Mules three for 1968 A Letter from India A Letter from Israel and Taresh the tea planter Those five books were all published by Oxford University Press It is unknown whether any of them were individually considered for the Medal and commended as runners up At that time as near as Helen Oxenbury in 1969 the Medal was sometimes conferred upon an illustrator for multiple named books Kate Greenaway Medal 2007 Curriculum Lab Elihu Burritt Library Central Connecticut State University CCSU Retrieved 2012 06 25 Kate Greenaway Medal Full List of Winners CILIP Carnegie amp Kate Greenaway Children s Book Awards CILIP Retrieved 2012 06 25 References edit a b c The CILIP Book Awards Kate Greenaway Medal 1 Call to reinstate illustrator Kate Greenaway s name on literary award 16 August 2023 Retrieved 16 March 2024 a b c d e The CILIP Book Awards Kate Greenaway Medal Full List of Winners 2 The CILIP Book Awards Carnegie Medal 3 a b c d The CILIP Book Awards Kate Greenaway Medal Award Criteria 4 a b The CILIP Book Awards Awards Process 5 CKG web archive org 20 April 2007 Archived from the original on 13 September 2007 Retrieved 22 March 2024 a b c d e f g h i j The CILIP Carnegie amp Kate Greenaway Children s Book Awards Press Desk web archive org 20 April 2007 Archived from the original on 13 May 2007 Retrieved 22 March 2024 The CILIP Book Awards Kate Greenaway Medal Recent Winners 6 a b c Walker Books Walker Books News www walker co uk 23 June 2014 Retrieved 21 March 2024 This Is Not My Hat Archived 23 June 2014 at the Wayback Machine hardcover Walker Books Retrieved 2014 06 29 THIS IS NOT MY HAT by Jon Klassen Kirkus Reviews 15 September 2012 Retrieved 2014 06 29 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y z aa ab ac ad ae af ag ah ai aj ak al am Kate Greenaway Medal Archived 16 September 2014 at the Wayback Machine 2007 Curriculum Lab Elihu Burritt Library Central Connecticut State University CCSU Retrieved 2012 06 22 The CILIP Carnegie amp Kate Greenaway Children s Book Awards Press Desk web archive org 16 October 2006 Archived from the original on 13 May 2007 Retrieved 24 March 2024 The CILIP Carnegie amp Kate Greenaway Children s Book Awards Press Desk web archive org 15 March 2007 Archived from the original on 13 May 2007 Retrieved 24 March 2024 The CILIP Carnegie amp Kate Greenaway Children s Book Awards Press Desk web archive org 20 April 2007 Archived from the original on 13 May 2007 Retrieved 24 March 2024 a b Eccleshare Julia 21 June 2007 Rosoff Grey Win Carnegie Greenaway Medals in U K 6 21 2007 10 03 00 AM Publishers Weekly web archive org Archived from the original on 7 October 2008 Retrieved 22 March 2024 a b Pauli Michelle 21 June 2007 Pullman wins Carnegie of Carnegies The Guardian ISSN 0261 3077 Retrieved 22 March 2024 a b 50th Anniversary Press Desk Releases for Anniversary 20 April 2007 Greenaway Kate Medal Winners Archived 18 July 2012 at the Wayback Machine Books and Writers booksandwriters co uk Retrieved 2012 06 27 Books and Writers Greenaway Kate Medal Winners www booksandwriters co uk Retrieved 16 March 2024 a b Renowned political cartoonist scoops Greenaway for first information book to win in 27 years Press release 12 July 2002 CILIP Retrieved 2012 07 02 a b c d e f g Kurt Maschler Awards Book Awards bizland com Retrieved 2012 07 21 Award winning Books for Children and Young Adults An Annual Guide 1989 Betty L Criscoe Scarecrow Press 1990 p 109 google books selection Retrieved 2012 06 26 a b c d ケイト グリーナウェイ賞ショートリスト 最終候補作品 リスト www yamaneko org about www pennydale co uk Retrieved 28 March 2024 About Jane Ray Retrieved 27 March 2024 a b c d Lafferty Fiona 30 May 1992 Enchanted by a peepshow The Daily Telegraph No 42591 p 58 Spencer J 1993 Harder choice from longer Carnegie Greenaway Lists Library Association Record 95 6 350 Cooling Wendy Rising Stars Books For Keeps booksforkeeps co uk Retrieved 27 March 2024 a b c d Lafferty Fiona 9 July 1994 The Kate Greenaway Medal The Daily Telegraph No 43248 p 95 a b c d e Gill Liz 10 July 1995 Finding out that books are worth reading The Times No 65315 p 37 a b c d Brennan Geraldine 3 May 1996 Eyes on the prizes Times Educational Supplement TES Archived from the original on 3 October 2012 Retrieved 18 March 2011 a b c Brennan Geraldine 18 July 1997 Drawing on memories of Vegas TES Archived from the original on 17 October 2012 Retrieved 27 March 2024 a b c d e Brennan Geraldine 2 May 1997 Library favourites TES Archived from the original on 3 October 2012 Retrieved 27 March 2024 a b c d e Brennan Geraldine 1 May 1998 It s the way they tell em TES Archived from the original on 22 February 2014 Retrieved 19 March 2011 a b c d Brennan Geraldine 7 May 1999 Staying power Children s book awards TES Archived from the original on 22 February 2014 Retrieved 19 March 2011 a b c d The Greenaway Medal The Guardian 16 May 2000 Retrieved 19 May 2018 Crown Sarah 4 October 2010 A life in books Lauren Child The Guardian ISSN 0261 3077 Retrieved 22 March 2024 Asylum story wins prestigious children s book prize The Guardian 13 July 2001 ISSN 0261 3077 Retrieved 26 March 2024 Damilola novel takes Carnegie Medal 13 July 2001 Retrieved 26 March 2024 a b c Yates Emma Books Guardian Unlimited 27 April 2001 Carnegie medal shortlist announced The Guardian ISSN 0261 3077 Retrieved 26 March 2024 a b c The CILIP Carnegie amp Kate Greenaway Children s Book Awards Press Desk web archive org Archived from the original on 14 April 2013 Retrieved 22 March 2024 Pratchett wins first major award 12 July 2002 Retrieved 26 March 2024 a b c d e The CILIP Carnegie amp Kate Greenaway Children s Book Awards Press Desk web archive org Archived from the original on 28 October 2014 Retrieved 22 March 2024 The CILIP Carnegie amp Kate Greenaway Children s Book Awards Press Desk web archive org 11 July 2003 Archived from the original on 17 October 2015 Retrieved 22 March 2024 The CILIP Carnegie amp Kate Greenaway Children s Book Awards Press Desk web archive org 11 July 2003 Archived from the original on 28 October 2014 Retrieved 22 March 2024 Sharon Creech wins Carnegie children s award The Guardian 11 July 2003 ISSN 0261 3077 Retrieved 26 March 2024 Children s duo finally triumph 11 July 2003 Retrieved 26 March 2024 a b c d e f The CILIP Carnegie amp Kate Greenaway Children s Book Awards Press Desk web archive org 2 May 2003 Archived from the original on 28 October 2014 Retrieved 22 March 2024 a b c d e f Children s laureate and debut author on Carnegie list The Guardian 2 May 2003 ISSN 0261 3077 Retrieved 26 March 2024 The CILIP Carnegie amp Kate Greenaway Children s Book Awards Press Desk web archive org 9 July 2004 Archived from the original on 20 July 2013 Retrieved 22 March 2024 Drawn to the story The Guardian 10 July 2004 ISSN 0261 3077 Retrieved 26 March 2024 Donnelly wins Carnegie book prize 9 July 2004 Retrieved 26 March 2024 a b c d e f g The CILIP Carnegie amp Kate Greenaway Children s Book Awards Press Desk web archive org 30 April 2004 Archived from the original on 20 July 2013 Retrieved 22 March 2024 Carnegie medal for Millions The Guardian 8 July 2005 ISSN 0261 3077 Retrieved 22 March 2024 The CILIP Carnegie amp Kate Greenaway Children s Book Awards Press Desk web archive org 8 July 2005 Archived from the original on 20 July 2013 Retrieved 22 March 2024 Screenwriter wins Carnegie prize 8 July 2005 Retrieved 26 March 2024 a b c d e f The CILIP Carnegie amp Kate Greenaway Children s Book Awards Press Desk web archive org 29 April 2005 Archived from the original on 20 July 2013 Retrieved 22 March 2024 Crown Sarah 7 July 2006 Carnegie newcomer beats veteran shortlist The Guardian ISSN 0261 3077 Retrieved 22 March 2024 Ezard John 7 July 2006 Newcomers take children s book prizes The Guardian ISSN 0261 3077 Retrieved 22 March 2024 a b c d e f g Ezard John 5 May 2006 Children s book award shortlists offer contrast in veterans versus new talent The Guardian ISSN 0261 3077 Retrieved 22 March 2024 a b c d e f g Pauli Michelle 5 May 2006 Veterans dominate Carnegie medal shortlist The Guardian ISSN 0261 3077 Retrieved 22 March 2024 The CILIP Carnegie amp Kate Greenaway Children s Book Awards Press Desk web archive org 21 June 2007 Archived from the original on 20 July 2013 Retrieved 22 March 2024 a b c d e The CILIP Carnegie amp Kate Greenaway Children s Book Awards Press Desk web archive org 20 April 2007 Archived from the original on 20 July 2013 Retrieved 22 March 2024 Higgins Charlotte 27 June 2008 Award winning book illustrator reveals her secret rat pee The Guardian ISSN 0261 3077 Retrieved 21 March 2024 Dammann Guy 26 June 2008 Medals for books of myth and mice The Guardian ISSN 0261 3077 Retrieved 21 March 2024 a b c d e f Pauli Michelle 18 April 2008 Carnegie shortlist takes children back in time The Guardian ISSN 0261 3077 Retrieved 21 March 2024 a b c d e f BfK News September 2008 Books For Keeps booksforkeeps co uk Retrieved 21 March 2024 Flood Alison 25 June 2009 Carnegie medal posthumously awarded to Siobhan Dowd The Guardian ISSN 0261 3077 Retrieved 21 March 2024 The CILIP Carnegie amp Kate Greenaway Children s Book Awards Press Desk web archive org 25 June 2009 Archived from the original on 20 July 2013 Retrieved 22 March 2024 a b c d e f g Jones Philip 26 April 2009 Teen titles dominate Carnegie shortlist The Bookseller Retrieved 21 March 2024 a b c d e f g Flood Alison 23 April 2009 Carnegie medal judges draw up boysy shortlist The Guardian ISSN 0261 3077 Retrieved 21 March 2024 Caldecott Medal amp Honor Books 1938 Present Association for Library Service to Children ALSC American Library Association ALA The Randolph Caldecott Medal ALSC ALA Retrieved 2014 03 18 Diaz Shelley 26 June 2014 Klassen and Brooks Take UK s Greenaway and Carnegie Medals www slj com Retrieved 21 March 2024 The Amnesty CILIP Honour for Carnegie and Kate Greenaway www amnesty org uk Retrieved 16 March 2024 Amnesty CILIP Honour Inaugural winners announced ALCS Retrieved 16 March 2024 A short history of human rights and children s books www amnesty org uk Retrieved 16 March 2024 a b Kean Danuta 19 June 2017 Carnegie and Kate Greenaway medals US double in children s book awards The Guardian ISSN 0261 3077 Retrieved 16 March 2024 Geraldine McCaughrean ends 30 year Carnegie Medal wait BBC News 18 June 2018 Retrieved 16 March 2024 Amnesty CILIP Honour update www amnesty org uk Retrieved 21 March 2024 The Yoto Carnegies Retrieved 21 March 2024 Flood Alison 24 June 2010 Neil Gaiman wins Carnegie medal The Guardian ISSN 0261 3077 Retrieved 21 March 2024 Morris Linda 21 August 2015 Three times lucky for Freya Blackwood in Children s Book Council of Australia awards The Sydney Morning Herald Retrieved 21 March 2024 Inside the world of Kate Greenaway winner Freya Blackwood the Guardian 24 June 2010 ISSN 0261 3077 Retrieved 21 March 2024 a b c d e f g Gallery The Kate Greenaway medal 2010 shortlist the Guardian 23 April 2010 ISSN 0261 3077 Retrieved 21 March 2024 a b c d e f g BfK News May 2010 Books For Keeps booksforkeeps co uk Retrieved 21 March 2024 Pauli Michelle 23 June 2011 Patrick Ness accepts Carnegie medal with fierce defence of libraries The Guardian ISSN 0261 3077 Retrieved 21 March 2024 Grahame Baker Smith winner of the Kate Greenaway medal 2011 gallery the Guardian 23 June 2011 ISSN 0261 3077 Retrieved 21 March 2024 a b c d e f g Stones Rosemary BfK News May 2011 Books For Keeps booksforkeeps co uk Retrieved 21 March 2024 a b c d e f g Ness and CILIP in school libraries plea The Bookseller Retrieved 21 March 2024 Ness Patrick Kay Jim 14 June 2012 How we made A Monster Calls The Guardian ISSN 0261 3077 Retrieved 21 March 2024 Jones Nicolette 14 June 2012 A Monster Calls Patrick Ness and Jim Kay talk about their Carnegie and Greenaway wins The Telegraph Retrieved 21 March 2024 Carnegie Medal Patrick Ness book A Monster Calls scoops double honours BBC News 12 June 2012 Retrieved 21 March 2024 a b c d e f g Flood Alison 27 March 2012 Carnegie shortlist includes Andy Mulligan s controversial Trash The Guardian ISSN 0261 3077 Retrieved 21 March 2024 a b c d e f g Kate Greenaway Medal shortlist in pictures the Guardian 27 March 2012 ISSN 0261 3077 Retrieved 21 March 2024 a b c d e f g Clements Toby 27 March 2012 Patrick Ness s A Monster Calls leads Carnegie and Kate Greenaway medal shortlists The Telegraph Retrieved 21 March 2024 Levi Pinfold s Black Dog in pictures the Guardian 19 June 2013 ISSN 0261 3077 Retrieved 21 March 2024 Wright Kirsty 19 June 2013 Gardner and Pinfold win Carnegie and Greenaway Medals The Bookseller Retrieved 21 March 2024 a b c d e f g Pauli Michelle 12 March 2013 Roddy Doyle in the Carnegie running with Greyhound of a Girl The Guardian ISSN 0261 3077 Retrieved 21 March 2024 a b c d e f g Roddy Doyle up for Carnegie Medal BBC News 11 March 2013 Retrieved 21 March 2024 a b c d e f g Kate Greenaway medal 2013 shortlist in pictures the Guardian 12 March 2013 ISSN 0261 3077 Retrieved 26 March 2024 Jon Klassen Kate Greenaway medal winner 2014 in pictures the Guardian 23 June 2014 ISSN 0261 3077 Retrieved 21 March 2024 The Bunker Diary wins children s book prize BBC News 23 June 2014 Retrieved 21 March 2024 Chilton Martin 23 June 2014 Carnegie and Kate Greenaway Medals 2014 winners announced The Telegraph Retrieved 21 March 2024 a b c d e f Carnegie medal and Kate Greenaway shortlists 2014 announced The Guardian 18 March 2014 ISSN 0261 3077 Retrieved 21 March 2024 a b c d e f Bradbury Lorna 18 March 2014 Where are the jokes on the Carnegie shortlist The Telegraph Retrieved 21 March 2024 a b c d e f Children s authors vie for Carnegie Medal BBC News 18 March 2014 Retrieved 21 March 2024 True historical stories inspire Carnegie and Greenaway winners BBC News 22 June 2015 Retrieved 16 March 2024 Drabble Emily 22 June 2015 William Grill Kate Greenaway medal winner 2015 in pictures the Guardian ISSN 0261 3077 Retrieved 16 March 2024 Daniel Lucy 16 July 2015 Why a picture book about Ernest Shackleton marks a publishing revolution The Telegraph ISSN 0307 1235 Retrieved 16 March 2024 a b c d e f g Sally Gardner shortlisted for Carnegie Medal for children s books BBC News 17 March 2015 Retrieved 16 March 2024 a b c d e f g Drabble Emily 17 March 2015 Carnegie medal and Kate Greenaway 2015 shortlists announced The Guardian ISSN 0261 3077 Retrieved 16 March 2024 a b c d e f g CILIP Carnegie Medal and CILIP Kate Greenaway Medal shortlists announced The Telegraph 17 March 2015 Retrieved 16 March 2024 Drabble Emily 20 June 2016 Chris Riddell wins the Kate Greenaway medal with The Sleeper and the Spindle The Guardian ISSN 0261 3077 Retrieved 16 March 2024 a b c d e f g Carnegie Medal Patrick Ness in running for third time BBC News 15 March 2016 Retrieved 16 March 2024 a b c d e f g Waddell Lily 15 March 2016 Carnegie medal and Kate Greenaway shortlists 2016 announced The Guardian ISSN 0261 3077 Retrieved 16 March 2024 a b c d e f g Take a peek at the illustrations on the Kate Greenaway shortlist www booktrust org uk Retrieved 16 March 2024 a b c d e f g Cain Sian 16 March 2017 Mal Peet in line for posthumous win as Carnegie shortlist announced The Guardian ISSN 0261 3077 Retrieved 16 March 2024 Eccleshare Julia 17 June 2018 Geraldine McCaughrean Sydney Smith Win 2018 Carnegie Greenaway Medals PublishersWeekly com Retrieved 16 March 2024 a b c d e f Greenaway Medal see the outstanding children s illustrations in the running for 2018 www booktrust org uk Retrieved 16 March 2024 a b c d e f Flood Alison 15 March 2018 Patrick Ness could land first ever Carnegie medal hat trick The Guardian ISSN 0261 3077 Retrieved 16 March 2024 Flood Alison 18 June 2019 Carnegie medal goes to first writer of colour in its 83 year history The Guardian ISSN 0261 3077 Retrieved 19 June 2019 a b c d e f g Flood Alison 19 March 2019 Carnegie medal shortlist celebrates novels in free verse The Guardian ISSN 0261 3077 Retrieved 16 March 2024 a b c d e f g 2019 Carnegie and Kate Greenaway medals shortlists announced Books Publishing 20 March 2019 Retrieved 26 March 2019 a b Flood Alison 17 June 2020 Shaun Tan becomes first BAME author to win Kate Greenaway medal The Guardian ISSN 0261 3077 Retrieved 16 March 2024 a b Shaffi Sarah 16 June 2022 Danica Novgorodoff wins Kate Greenaway medal for graphic novel Long Way Down The Guardian ISSN 0261 3077 Retrieved 16 March 2024 a b Historic Win as Yoto Carnegie Medal for Writing Awarded to a Book in Translation for the First Time A Graphic Novel Wins Illustration Medal for the Second Consecutive Year The Yoto Carnegies Retrieved 21 June 2023 Cowdrey Katherine 17 June 2020 McGowan and Tan awarded CILIP Carnegie and Kate Greenaway medals The Bookseller a b c d e f g SHORTLISTS FOR 2020 CILIP CARNEGIE AND KATE GREENAWAY MEDALS ANNOUNCED The CILIP Carnegie and Kate Greenaway Children s Book Awards carnegiegreenaway org uk Retrieved 20 March 2020 a b c d e f g Hope Jake 19 March 2020 CILIP Kate Greenaway medal shortlist announced www booktrust org uk Retrieved 16 March 2024 Flood Alison 16 June 2021 Jason Reynolds wins Carnegie medal for breathtaking Look Both Ways the Guardian Retrieved 17 June 2021 Reynolds Smith win 2021 Carnegie Greenaway medals Books Publishing 17 June 2021 Retrieved 17 June 2021 a b c d e f g Flood Alison 18 March 2021 Shortlist for Carnegie medal offers locked down children hope and escapism The Guardian ISSN 0261 3077 Retrieved 16 March 2024 a b c d e f g Greenaway Carnegie Medal shortlists announced Books Publishing 19 March 2021 Retrieved 19 March 2021 Evans Connie 16 June 2022 Graphic novel wins Yoto Kate Greenaway Medal for first time 50 years The Independent Retrieved 16 March 2024 a b c d e f g Knight Lucy 16 March 2022 Carnegie medal shortlist spotlights real life stories of friendship in challenging times The Guardian ISSN 0261 3077 Retrieved 16 March 2024 a b c d e f g Indian origin Manjeet Mann s children s book The Crossing shortlisted for UK s Yoto Carnegie Medal The Economic Times 17 March 2022 ISSN 0013 0389 Retrieved 16 March 2024 Creamer Ella 21 June 2023 Carnegie medal for children s books goes to a translation for the first time The Guardian ISSN 0261 3077 Retrieved 16 March 2024 a b c d e Anderson Porter 24 March 2023 Yoto Carnegies Announce 2023 Children s Book Shortlist Publishing Perspectives Retrieved 16 March 2024 a b c d e f g h Creamer Ella 13 March 2024 Carnegie medal for children s books shortlist announced The Guardian ISSN 0261 3077 Retrieved 16 March 2024 CitationsThe CILIP Carnegie amp Kate Greenaway Children s Book Awards homepage Sponsored by CILIP and others Retrieved 2012 05 06 70 Years Celebration subsite The CILIP Book Awards Retrieved 2012 05 06 Select from the menu at left page needed External links editKate Greenaway Medal at loveTheBook Renaming the Kate Greenaway Medal article at TeenLibrarian Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Kate Greenaway Medal amp oldid 1217779329, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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