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Honor Roll titles

Cover for Handbook for Dragon Slayers
February 17, 2017

Review: Handbook for Dragon Slayers by Merrie Haskell

Princess Tilda does not demonstrate the need to “overcome” her clubfoot, that word many of us in the disability community have come to loathe. To me, Tilda represents a new kind of heroine, who is strong and doesn’t need saving, but also acknowledges and shows her vulnerability and insecurities.

Cover for When We Collided
April 15, 2016

Review: When We Collided by Emery Lord

Vivi’s struggle with bipolar disorder was portrayed accurately and compassionately, and I would highly recommend the book for readers who want to understand the illness better.

Cover for Hurt Go Happy
February 19, 2016

Review: Hurt Go Happy by Ginny Rorby

One of the more authentic reflections I have seen of what it can be like to grow up deaf — this is the kind of book I wish I could have had when I was younger.

Cover for Reaching for Sun
January 15, 2016

Review: Reaching for Sun by Tracie Vaughn Zimmer

Though I would have liked more disability details woven into the story, I relate to and applaud the author’s portrayal of cerebral palsy overall.

Cover for Cover for JERK, CALIFORNIA
November 20, 2015

Review: Jerk, California by Jonathan Friesen

I would’ve enjoyed Jerk, California a lot more if its depiction of life with Tourette’s Syndrome was handled as well as its technical depiction of Tourette’s Syndrome itself.

Cover for Cover for ANYTHING BUT TYPICAL
April 20, 2015

Review: Anything But Typical by Nora Raleigh Baskin

Like in real life, autism spectrum disorder alone is never the whole story, and Baskin does a good job balancing Jason’s autism with his writing life, family, school, and budding friendship. She’s succeeded in creating an authentic autistic character who is anything but stereotypical.

Cover for Rules
April 12, 2015

Review: Rules by Cynthia Lord

This is a book about a girl with an autistic brother. The autistic brother is crucial to the plot, but her actual brother is really more of a plot device than anything else.

Cover for Five Flavors of Dumb
November 7, 2014

Review: Five Flavors of Dumb by Anthony John

Despite some flaws, it is clear the author did his research. I enjoyed this book and recommend it.

Photo of Merrie Haskell
July 30, 2014

Interview with Merrie Haskell about Handbook for Dragon Slayers

A princess with a clubfoot. Who can resist? We can’t, and apparently the Schneider Family Book Award jury couldn’t, either. Merrie Haskell’s 2014 win of the award was just one of the reasons we wanted to discuss her MG fantasy novel Handbook for Dragon Slayers with her.

A picture showing covers of 2014's Schneider Award winners: A Splash of Red, Handbook for Dragon Slayers, and Rose Under Fire.
July 12, 2014

Interview with Alyson Beecher, 2015 Schneider Family Book Award Jury Chair

We’ve been wanting to shake hands with the good folks of the Schneider Family Book Award — an ALA award which highlights depictions of disability in children’s literature — for a while, and July 2014 marked the perfect time: while we celebrated our first anniversary, the Schneider celebrated its tenth!

Cover for Marcelo in the Real World
July 1, 2013

Review: Marcelo in the Real World by Francisco X. Stork

While we’re never told exactly what Marcelo’s impairment is, and it’s implied that no one can quite figure it out, it shares many features that will be familiar to those of us on the autism spectrum.