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==Phoenix Award winners==
== Recipients ==

{| class="sortable wikitable"
There have been 35 Award winners and 35 Honor Books announced since 1985 (1965 to 1998 publications).<ref name=award/><ref name=brochure2012/><!--1985 to 2012--><ref name=award2012/><ref name=award2013/>
|+Sydney Taylor Manuscript Award Winners <ref name="manuscript award">{{cite web |title=SYDNEY TAYLOR MANUSCRIPT AWARD WINNERS |url=http://databases.jewishlibraries.org/stma-winners |website=Association of Jewish Libraries |access-date=1 March 2021}}</ref>

! scope="col" |Award Year
{| class=wikitable
! scope="col" |Title
|+ Phoenix Award 1985 to present{{efn|name=winners}}
! scope="col" |Published Title
|-
! scope="col" |Author
! Year !! Winner !! Honor Books
! scope="col" |Publisher
|-
! scope="col" |Publication Year
| 2020 || [[Carolyn Coman]], ''[[Many Stones]]''
|-
| [[Walter Dean Myers]], ''[[145th Street: Short Stories]]''
! 2021
|-
| ''Cats and Honey Cake''
|-
| 2019 || [[Louise Erdrich]], ''[[The Birchbark House]]''
| [[Connie Porter]], ''[[Imani All Mine]]''
|-
|2018
|[[Elizabeth Partridge]], ''[[Restless Spirit: The Life and Work of Dorothea Lange]]''
|
|
|-
| {{sortname|Sonja |Spear}}
| 2017 || [[James Heneghan]], ''[[Wish Me Luck (novel)|Wish Me Luck]]''
|
| [[Paul Fleischman]], ''[[Seedfolks]]''<br>[[Naomi Shihab Nye]], ''[[Habibi (novel)|Habibi]]''
|
|-
|-
| 2016 || [[Andrew Clements]], ''[[Frindle]]''
! 2019
| (none)
| {{sort|Corner of the World|''A Corner of the World''}}
|
|-
| 2015<ref name=award/> || [[Kyoko Mori]], ''[[One Bird]]''
| {{sortname|Jessica |Littman}}
|
| (none)
|
|-
| 2014<ref name=news2013.2/> || [[Gary Soto]], ''[[Jesse]]''
|-
| [[Graham Salisbury]], ''[[Under the Blood Red Sun]]''
! 2018
|-
| {{sort|Seventh Handmaiden|''The Seventh Handmaiden''}}
| 2013<ref name=award2013/><ref name=news2012.2/> || [[Gaye Hiçyilmaz]], ''[[The Frozen Waterfall]]''
|
| [[Walter Dean Myers]], ''[[Malcolm X: By Any Means Necessary]]''
| {{sortname|Judith |Pransky}}
|
|-
| 2012‡<ref name=award2012/> || [[Karen Hesse]], ''[[Letters from Rifka]]''
|
| [[Michael Dorris]], ''[[Morning Girl (book)|Morning Girl]]''<br> [[Frances Temple]], ''[[Taste of Salt: A Story of Modern Haiti]]''
|-
|-
! 2016
| 2011‡ || [[Virginia Euwer Wolff]], ''[[The Mozart Season]]''
| ''Honey and Me''
| [[Mary Downing Hahn]], ''[[Stepping on the Cracks]]''<br> [[Eloise McGraw]], ''[[The Striped Ships]]''
|
|-
| {{sortname|Meira |Drazin}}
| 2010 || [[Rosemary Sutcliff]], ''[[The Shining Company]]''
|
|
| (none)
|-
|-
| 2009 || [[Francesca Lia Block]], ''[[Weetzie Bat]]''
! 2015
| [[Sylvia Cassedy]], ''[[Lucie Babbidge’s House]]''
| ''Viva, Rose''
|
|-
| 2008‡|| [[Peter Dickinson]], ''[[Eva (novel)|Eva]]''
| {{sortname|Susan |Krawitz}}
| [[Jane Yolen]], ''[[The Devil's Arithmetic]]''
|
|
|-
| 2007 || [[Margaret Mahy]], ''[[Memory (Margaret Mahy)|Memory]]''
|-
| [[Sheila Gordon]], ''[[Waiting for the Rain]]''
! 2013
|-
| ''Freestyle''
| 2006 || [[Diana Wynne Jones]], ''[[Howl's Moving Castle]]''
|
| [[Margaret Mahy]], ''[[The Tricksters]]''<br> [[Philip Pullman]], ''[[The Shadow in the Plate]]'' (''[[The Shadow in the North]]'')
| {{sortname|Karen |Propp}}
|
|-
| 2005 || [[Margaret Mahy]], ''[[The Catalogue of the Universe]]''
|
| [[Diana Wynne Jones]], ''[[Fire and Hemlock]]''
|-
|-
! 2011
| 2004‡|| [[Berlie Doherty]], ''[[White Peak Farm]]''
| ''In Search of Lottie''
| [[Brian Doyle (writer)|Brian Doyle]], ''[[Angel Square]]''
|
|-
| {{sortname|Susan A. |Ross}}
| 2003 || [[Ivan Southall]], ''[[The Long Night Watch]]''
|
| [[Cynthia Voigt]], ''[[A Solitary Blue]]''
|
|-
|-
| 2002‡|| [[Zibby Oneal]], ''[[A Formal Feeling]]''
! 2010
| [[Robert H. Locke|Clayton Bess]], ''[[Story for a Black Night]]''
| ''On the Run''
|
|-
| 2001‡|| [[Peter Dickinson]], ''[[The Seventh Raven]]''
| {{sortname|Joan |Schoettler}}
| [[Kathryn Lasky]], ''[[The Night Journey (novel)|The Night Journey]]''
|
|
|-
| 2000‡|| [[Monica Hughes]], ''[[Keeper of the Isis Light]]''
|-
| [[Jane Langton]], ''[[The Fledgling]]''
! 2009
|-
| ''When the Hurricane Came to New Orleans''
| 1999 || [[E.L. Konigsburg]], ''[[Throwing Shadows]]''
| ''When the Hurricane Came''
| [[Rosa Guy]], ''[[The Disappearance (1979 novel)|The Disappearance]]''<br> [[Ouida Sebestyen]], ''[[Words by Heart]]''
| {{sortname|Nechama |Liss-Levinson}}
|
|-
| 1998 || [[Jill Paton Walsh]], ''[[A Chance Child]]''
| 2012
| [[Robin McKinley]], ''[[Beauty (Robin McKinley book)|Beauty]]''<br> [[Doris Orgel]], ''[[The Devil in Vienna]]''
|-
|-
! 2008
| 1997 || [[Robert Cormier]], ''[[I Am the Cheese]]''
| ''Stealing the Show''
|
| (none)
|-
| {{sortname|Margaret |Chaiken}}
| 1996 || [[Alan Garner]], ''[[The Stone Book]]''
|
| [[William Steig]], ''[[Abel's Island]]''
|
|-
|-
| 1995 || [[Laurence Yep]], ''[[Dragonwings]]''
! 2007
| [[Natalie Babbitt]], ''[[Tuck Everlasting]]''
| ''Getting Rid of Jeremy''
|
|-
| 1994 || [[Katherine Paterson]], ''[[Of Nightingales That Weep]]''
| {{sortname|Yael |Mermelstein}}
| [[James Lincoln Collier]] and [[Christopher Collier (historian)|Christopher Collier]], ''[[My Brother Sam is Dead]]''&nbsp;<br> [[Sharon Bell Mathis]], ''[[Listen for the Fig Tree]]''
|
|
|-
| 1993 || [[Nina Bawden]], ''[[Carrie's War]]''
|-
| [[E.L. Konigsburg]], ''[[A Proud Taste for Scarlet and Miniver]]''
! 2004
|-
| ''Cara's Kitchen''
| 1992 || [[Mollie Hunter]], ''[[A Sound of Chariots]]''
| ''Julia's Kitchen''
| (none)
| {{sortname|Brenda A. |Ferber}}
|-
| [[Farrar, Straus & Giroux]]
| 1991 || [[Jane Gardam]], ''[[A Long Way from Verona]]''
| 2006
| [[William Mayne]], ''[[A Game of Dark]]''<br> [[Ursula K. Le Guin]], ''[[The Tombs of Atuan]]''
|-
|-
! 2002
| 1990 || [[Sylvia Engdahl]], ''[[Enchantress from the Stars]]''
| {{sort|Pickpocket's Tale|''A Pickpocket's Tale''}}
| [[William Mayne]], ''[[Ravensgill]]''<br> [[Scott O'Dell]], ''[[Sing Down the Moon]]''
| {{sort|Pickpocket's Tale|''A Pickpocket's Tale''}}
|-
| {{sortname|Karen |Schwabach}}
| 1989 || [[Helen Cresswell]], ''[[The Night Watchmen]]''
| [[Random House]]
| [[Milton Meltzer]], ''[[Brother Can You Spare a Dime?]]''<br> [[Adrienne Richard]], ''[[Pistol]]''
| 2006
|-
|-
| 1988 || [[Erik Christian Haugaard]], ''[[The Rider and his Horse]]''&nbsp;
! 1999
| Honor books were instituted in 1989.<ref name=award/>
| ''Zayda Was a Cowboy''
|-
| ''Zayda Was a Cowboy''
| 1987 || [[Leon Garfield]], ''[[Smith (Garfield novel)|Smith]]''
| {{sortname|June E. |Nislick}}
| [[Jewish Publication Society]]
| 2005
|-
! 1998
| ''Devorah''
| {{sort|Night of the Burning|''The Night of the Burning: Devorah's Story''}}
| {{sortname|Linda Press |Wulfe}}
| [[Farrar, Straus & Giroux]]
| 2006
|-
! 1997
| ''When the Soldiers Were Gone''
| ''When the Soldiers Were Gone''
| {{sortname|Vera W. |Propp}}
| [[G.P. Putnam's Sons]]
| 1999
|-
! 1997
| ''All Star Brothers''
| ''All Star Season''
| {{sortname|Tovah S. |Yavin}}
| [[Kar-Ben]]
| 2006
|-
! 1996
| ''Passover Promise''
|
| {{sortname|Donna Brown |Agins}}
|
|
|-
! 1995
| ''After I Said No''
|
| {{sortname|Sheila Golburgh |Johnson}}
|
|
|-
! 1994
| ''Of Heroes, Hooks and Heirlooms''
| ''Of Heroes, Hooks and Heirlooms''
| {{sortname|Faye |Silton}}
| [[Jewish Publication Society]]
| 1996
|-
! 1993
| {{sort|Treasure in the Tiny Blue Tin|''The Treasure in the Tiny Blue Tin''}}
| {{sort|Treasure in the Tiny Blue Tin|''The Treasure in the Tiny Blue Tin''}}
| {{sortname|Lilian Fox |Ducharme}}
| [[Texas Christian University Press]]
| 1998
|-
! 1991
| ''Garden of the Gentle Giant''
|
| {{sortname|David |Meir-Levi}}
|
|
|-
! 1991
| ''Leaving Egypt''
|
| {{sortname|Lois |Roisman}}
|
|
|-
! 1991
| ''Tamar's Cat''
|
| {{sortname|Aviva |Cantor}}
|
|
|-
! 1990
| ''Rabbi Aaron's Treasure''
| ''Reb Aharon's Treasure''
| {{sortname|Hannah |Bandes}}
| Targum/[[Feldheim Publishers|Feldheim]]
| 1993
|-
! 1990
| ''Operation Dewey''
| ''Operation Dewey''
| {{sort|Rogers, Kirby|[[Kirby Rogers|Dr. Kirby Rogers]]}}
|
| 2002
|-
! 1988
| ''Borders''
|
| {{sortname|Suzi |Wizowaty}}
|
|
|-
! 1987
| {{sort|Streets Are Paved with Gold|''The Streets Are Paved with Gold''}}
| {{sort|Streets Are Paved with Gold|''The Streets Are Paved with Gold''}}
| {{sortname|Frances |Weissenberg}}
| [[Harbinger House]]
| 1990
|-
! 1986
| ''Cubs of the Lion of Judah''
|
| {{sortname|Elaine |Soloway}}
|
|
|-
! 1985
| ''Spirit''
|
| {{sortname|Rosalie |Fleisher}}
|
|
|-
| 1986 || [[Robert J. Burch]], ''[[Queenie Peavy]]''
|
|
|-
| 1985 || [[Rosemary Sutcliff]], ''[[The Mark of the Horse Lord]]''
|}
|}
: ‡ Seven acceptance speeches have been published online in one of two locations:<ref name=award/><ref name=papers/> [[Monica Hughes]], 2000; [[Peter Dickinson]], 2001; [[Zibby Oneal]], 2002; [[Berlie Doherty]], 2004; [[Peter Dickinson]], 2008; [[Virginia Euwer Wolff]], 2011; [[Karen Hesse]], 2012.


==Marcia Coggs==
==Marcia Coggs==

Revision as of 19:26, 22 March 2021

Phoenix Award winners

There have been 35 Award winners and 35 Honor Books announced since 1985 (1965 to 1998 publications).[1][2][3][4]

Phoenix Award 1985 to present[a]
Year Winner Honor Books
2020 Carolyn Coman, Many Stones Walter Dean Myers, 145th Street: Short Stories
2019 Louise Erdrich, The Birchbark House Connie Porter, Imani All Mine
2018 Elizabeth Partridge, Restless Spirit: The Life and Work of Dorothea Lange
2017 James Heneghan, Wish Me Luck Paul Fleischman, Seedfolks
Naomi Shihab Nye, Habibi
2016 Andrew Clements, Frindle (none)
2015[1] Kyoko Mori, One Bird (none)
2014[5] Gary Soto, Jesse Graham Salisbury, Under the Blood Red Sun
2013[4][6] Gaye Hiçyilmaz, The Frozen Waterfall Walter Dean Myers, Malcolm X: By Any Means Necessary
2012‡[3] Karen Hesse, Letters from Rifka Michael Dorris, Morning Girl
Frances Temple, Taste of Salt: A Story of Modern Haiti
2011‡ Virginia Euwer Wolff, The Mozart Season Mary Downing Hahn, Stepping on the Cracks
Eloise McGraw, The Striped Ships
2010 Rosemary Sutcliff, The Shining Company (none)
2009 Francesca Lia Block, Weetzie Bat Sylvia Cassedy, Lucie Babbidge’s House
2008‡ Peter Dickinson, Eva Jane Yolen, The Devil's Arithmetic
2007 Margaret Mahy, Memory Sheila Gordon, Waiting for the Rain
2006 Diana Wynne Jones, Howl's Moving Castle Margaret Mahy, The Tricksters
Philip Pullman, The Shadow in the Plate (The Shadow in the North)
2005 Margaret Mahy, The Catalogue of the Universe Diana Wynne Jones, Fire and Hemlock
2004‡ Berlie Doherty, White Peak Farm Brian Doyle, Angel Square
2003 Ivan Southall, The Long Night Watch Cynthia Voigt, A Solitary Blue
2002‡ Zibby Oneal, A Formal Feeling Clayton Bess, Story for a Black Night
2001‡ Peter Dickinson, The Seventh Raven Kathryn Lasky, The Night Journey
2000‡ Monica Hughes, Keeper of the Isis Light Jane Langton, The Fledgling
1999 E.L. Konigsburg, Throwing Shadows Rosa Guy, The Disappearance
Ouida Sebestyen, Words by Heart
1998 Jill Paton Walsh, A Chance Child Robin McKinley, Beauty
Doris Orgel, The Devil in Vienna
1997 Robert Cormier, I Am the Cheese (none)
1996 Alan Garner, The Stone Book William Steig, Abel's Island
1995 Laurence Yep, Dragonwings Natalie Babbitt, Tuck Everlasting
1994 Katherine Paterson, Of Nightingales That Weep James Lincoln Collier and Christopher Collier, My Brother Sam is Dead 
Sharon Bell Mathis, Listen for the Fig Tree
1993 Nina Bawden, Carrie's War E.L. Konigsburg, A Proud Taste for Scarlet and Miniver
1992 Mollie Hunter, A Sound of Chariots (none)
1991 Jane Gardam, A Long Way from Verona William Mayne, A Game of Dark
Ursula K. Le Guin, The Tombs of Atuan
1990 Sylvia Engdahl, Enchantress from the Stars William Mayne, Ravensgill
Scott O'Dell, Sing Down the Moon
1989 Helen Cresswell, The Night Watchmen Milton Meltzer, Brother Can You Spare a Dime?
Adrienne Richard, Pistol
1988 Erik Christian Haugaard, The Rider and his Horse  Honor books were instituted in 1989.[1]
1987 Leon Garfield, Smith
1986 Robert J. Burch, Queenie Peavy
1985 Rosemary Sutcliff, The Mark of the Horse Lord
‡ Seven acceptance speeches have been published online in one of two locations:[1][7] Monica Hughes, 2000; Peter Dickinson, 2001; Zibby Oneal, 2002; Berlie Doherty, 2004; Peter Dickinson, 2008; Virginia Euwer Wolff, 2011; Karen Hesse, 2012.

Marcia Coggs

Marcia Coggs
Member of the Wisconsin State Assembly
from the 18th district
In office
January 3, 1977 – January 3, 1993
Preceded byLloyd Barbee
Succeeded byLeon Young
Personal details
Born(1928-04-05)April 5, 1928
Kansas City, Kansas
DiedDecember 9, 2003(2003-12-09) (aged 75)
Milwaukee, Wisconsin
Political partyDemocratic


Background

Marcia Priscilla Young was born in Kansas City, Kansas, the fifth of nine children. [8][9] Her parents, Harold Clinton Young II and Elizabeth Patton Young, ran a printing business. Her grandfather, D.J. Young, one of the earliest pioneers of the Church of God in Christ. She attended the Milwaukee State Teachers College from 1955-56 and earned a Bachelor of Science degree from the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee. [9]

In 1952 she married Isaac N. Coggs, with whom she had four children including politician Elizabeth M. Coggs. The same year they were married, Isaac Coggs successfully ran for a seat in the Wisconsin State Assembly where he served for 12 years. They were married until his death in 1973. [8]

Career

Before entering politics, Marcia Coggs worked for 13 years for the former Milwaukee County Children's Home. [8] She unsuccessfully ran for office in the Wisconsin State Senate in 1960. She successfully ran for Wisconsin State Assembly in 1976, just three years after the death of her husband. Early in her legislative career she was quoted as saying, "You cannot legislate the heart, but you can legislate laws. My mission is to work for social change. Period. When I say social change, that is self-explanatory - human needs." [8]

Coggs was the first African-American woman elected to the state assembly. [10] In addition, she was the first black person to sit on the state Legislature's Joint Finance Committee, serving from 1987 until 1992. [11][12] She served on Health and Human Services Committee the entire time she was in office, and many of the committees on which she served were focused on children, families, and employment. [12]

Legacy

  1. ^ a b c d Cite error: The named reference award was invoked but never defined (see the help page).
  2. ^ Cite error: The named reference brochure2012 was invoked but never defined (see the help page).
  3. ^ a b Cite error: The named reference award2012 was invoked but never defined (see the help page).
  4. ^ a b Cite error: The named reference award2013 was invoked but never defined (see the help page).
  5. ^ Cite error: The named reference news2013.2 was invoked but never defined (see the help page).
  6. ^ Cite error: The named reference news2012.2 was invoked but never defined (see the help page).
  7. ^ Cite error: The named reference papers was invoked but never defined (see the help page).
  8. ^ a b c d Silvers, Amy Rabideau (10 Dec 2003). "Coggs was diminutive giant of state politics, civil rights". Milwaukee Journal Sentinel.
  9. ^ a b Theobald, H. Rupert; Robbins, Patricia V., eds. (1977). he state of Wisconsin 1977 Blue Book. Madison, WI: Wisconsin Legislative Reference Bureau. Retrieved 6 May 2020.
  10. ^ "Assembly History & Facts". Office of the Assembly Chief Clerk. Wisconsin State Legislature. Retrieved 6 May 2020.
  11. ^ "First black woman to serve in Wisconsin legislature dies at 75". The Journal Times. 10 Dec 2003. Retrieved 6 May 2020.
  12. ^ a b Barish, Lawrence S.; Theobald, H. Rupert, eds. (1991–1992). State of Wisconsin 1991-1992 Blue Book. Madison, WI: Wisconsin Legislative Reference Bureau. Retrieved 6 May 2020.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: date format (link)


Cite error: There are <ref group=lower-alpha> tags or {{efn}} templates on this page, but the references will not show without a {{reflist|group=lower-alpha}} template or {{notelist}} template (see the help page).