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2016 New Visions Award Winners

New York, NY—Children’s book publisher LEE & LOW BOOKS is thrilled to announce the results of its fourth annual New Visions Award for new authors of color. This year, in partnership with First Book and the NEA Foundation, the award expanded to two winning manuscripts: Escape from Tiananmen Square, by Charlotte Sun, and The Wind Called My Name, by Mary Louise Sanchez.

In the middle grade historical thriller Escape from Tiananmen Square, a twelve-year-old boy must help his older sister escape Tiananmen Square and flee China after the government’s brutal crackdown on student protesters. Along the way, the siblings are aided by an escape network called “Operation Yellowbird,” based on the real-life secret underground. Charlotte Sun has a love of Chinese history and adventure stories.

The Wind Called My Name, by Mary Louise Sanchez, is a middle grade novel about ten-year-old Margarita, who moves from her ancestral family home in New Mexico to Wyoming during the Great Depression. Sanchez deftly weaves together rich historical and cultural details in this unique American pioneer story. Born and raised in Wyoming, Sanchez received the 2012 Emerging Voices Award from the Society of Children’s Book Writers and Illustrators. 

Winning authors receive a cash prize of $1,000 and a standard publication contract with Tu Books, the middle grade and young adult imprint of LEE & LOW BOOKS. Three New Visions Award finalists were also announced: Searching for Superman by Jasmine Wade, Angel Dressed in Black by Robin Farmer, and Sun-Kadelic: An Afro-Futuristic, Historical Fiction by Jiton Davidson.

An Innovative Partnership

The collaboration with First Book and the NEA Foundation has enabled LEE & LOW BOOKS to expand its New Visions Award by selecting and publishing work by an additional new author of color. LEE & LOW BOOKS will also publish a special paperback edition of The Wind Called My Name exclusively for the First Book Marketplace, a site that offers brand-new books and educational resources—at the lowest possible prices or for free—to schools and programs serving children in need.

In addition, eight diverse books previously published by LEE & LOW BOOKS will be printed as more affordable special edition paperbacks and will become available on the First Book Marketplace starting in April. The NEA Foundation will provide more than $100,000 in credits to educators to purchase these and other diverse books through the First Book Marketplace.

The partnership demonstrates what can happen when foundations, publishers, and nonprofits come together to solve a problem: in this case, the lack of availability of diverse books. The partnership will result in the publication of a new author of color as well as increased accessibility and affordability for diverse books already published.

Contact Us

Telephone: (212) 779-4400 x 28

Email: quotes[at]leeandlow[dot]com

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