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3905 查看 18 收藏帖子 (2)

说说我的看法高级模式

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  • susanlou

    2014-6-4 19:09:17 使用道具

    好看就行了,好像很多好书都没有得纽奖。是不是因为是英国的作者所以不能评比?
  • 黄瓜鱼

    2014-6-4 19:29:46 使用道具

    纽奖作品经典又好看
  • 黄瓜鱼

    2014-6-4 19:38:48 使用道具

    转载:纽伯瑞奖少年小说主题包罗万象。。。。。但都是从少年儿童的视角出发,内容紧紧围绕着青少年的启蒙与成长,对夸世纪的少年儿童在现代社会中的智力,情感,个性与健康人格的形成,对培养他们积极进取的人生态度有着深远的意义和重要的影响。
  • 冰凌

    2014-6-5 16:30:58 使用道具

    值得探讨的问题
  • sandydad

    2014-6-6 09:12:20 使用道具

    本帖最后由 sandydad 于 2014-6-6 09:17 编辑

    听说 HP 不能拿Newbery 奖 是因为 J.K. Rowling 是英国人不是美国人

    1) Harry Potter and The Philosopher's Stone

    Nestlé Smarties Book Prize 1997 Gold Medal 9-11 years

    FCBG Children’s Book Award 1997 Overall winner and Longer Novel Category Birmingham

    Cable Children’s Book Award 1997

    Young Telegraph Paperback of the Year 1998 Carnegie Medal 1998 (Shortlist)

    British Book Awards 1997 Children’s Book of the Year

    Sheffield Children’s Book Award 1998

    Whitaker's Platinum Book Award 2001

    2) Harry Potter and The Chamber of Secrets

    Nestlé Smarties Book Prize 1998 Gold Medal 9-11 years

    Scottish Arts Council Children’s Book Award 1999 FCBG Children’s Book Award 1998 Overall winner and Longer Novel Category

    British Book Awards 1998 Children’s Book of the Year

    North East Book Award 1999


    North East Scotland Book Award 1998

    The Booksellers Association / The Bookseller Author of the Year 1998

    Whitaker's Platinum Book Award 2001.
    3) Harry Potter and The Prisoner of Azkaban

    Nestlé Smarties Book Prize 1999 Gold Medal 9-11 years

    Whitbread Children’s Book of the Year 1999 British Book Awards 1999 Author of the Year


    The Booksellers Association / The Bookseller Author of the Year 1998


    FCBG Children's Book Award 1999 / Longer Novel Category


    Whitaker's Platinum Book Award 2001.

    4) Harry Potter and The Goblet of Fire

    Scottish Arts Council Book Award 2001

    Children's Book Award in 9-11 category 2001 Winner of the Hugo Award

    Whitaker's Platinum Book Award 2001.

    5)Harry Potter and The Order of the Phoenix

    WH Smith People’s Choice Book Awards, Fiction category, 2003

    British Book Awards Book of the Year (shortlist) 2003.

    6) Harry Potter and The Half-Blood Prince

    Winner of the British Book Awards, WH Smith Book of the Year 2006

    Royal Mail Award for Scottish Children's Books (best book for readers aged 8-12 years) 2006.

    7) Harry Potter and The Deathly Hallows

    Booksellers Association Independent Booksellers' Book Prize (shortlist) 2008.

    Carnegie Medal 2008 (longlist)
  • snipeer

    楼主 2014-6-6 12:22:11 使用道具

    提示: 作者被禁止或删除 内容自动屏蔽
  • sandydad

    2014-6-6 13:38:57 使用道具

    本帖最后由 sandydad 于 2014-6-6 13:46 编辑

    15 best children's books of all time -- By The Telegraph

    1) Watership Down -- Richard Adams (1972)

    The full-scale novel about rabbits finding their promised land has the magic of prophecy, idyllic Hampshire locations and the structure of the Aeneid. Adams enjoys parading his scholarship, and this is a lively introduction to brainy books.


    2)The Hobbit -- J R R Tolkien (1937)

    Here we meet the characters who will make The Lord of the Rings happen, and on a pre-Peter Jackson scale. If anything, Gollum is even more chilling here, because we see him through the eyes of a hobbit – seldom the calmest of travellers.

    3) The Lion, the Witch and the Wardrobe  -- C S Lewis (1950)

    Welcome to the magical land of Narnia, where the White Witch reigns over a snow-girt land peopled by fawns, talking beavers and people eager to put their trust in four kids from Finchley. The Christian allusions come later, but for now this is pure narrative magic.

    4) Charlotte’s Web -- E B White (1952)

    The New Yorker writer cherished for his elegance of style gives us an altruistic spider with exquisite manners, and a pig to make her proud. There are intimations of mortality, but a plot of fame and legacy thumbs its nose at the inevitable.

    5) The Little Prince -- Antoine de Saint-Exupéry (1943)

    The Little Prince falls to Earth to meet the author, who has crashed his plane. His quizzical, wise stories of other planets (most of which are inhabited by solitary monomaniacs) lead to the daftest of all – our own.

    6) Pippi Longstocking -- Astrid Lindgren (1945)

    It’s quite something to live as an orphan with just a horse and a monkey for companions. The heroine has a chutzpah that makes her sound at her most adult when she’s flouting adult conventions, especially at teatime.

    7) Emil and the Detectives -- Erich Kästner (1929)

    When Emil is robbed of his mother’s hard-earned savings (that were never likely to stretch far), he has help from a scratch squad of child detectives from Berlin. However much this sounds like the best child’s game ever, the real world is seldom far away.

    8) James and the Giant Peach -- Roald Dahl (1961)

    One of Dahl’s earliest, best, and most fully developed tales. There is no attempt to make the giant insects or articulate clouds seem natural: this is a world of wonder, more marvellous than Wonka’s, even.

    9) Winnie the Pooh -- A A Milne (1926)

    Characters begin days by visiting one another, and end up shifting houses, learning to fly or surviving floods.

    10) A Little Princess -- Frances Hodgson Burnett (1905)

    Sara has a privileged background but is now living as a Cinderella figure; and she plays at being a princess. But her response shows that being a princess is less a social ranking than a state of mind.

    11) The Just So Stories -- Rudyard Kipling (1902)

    How did the leopard get his spots? How was the alphabet made? Why are elephant’s trunks so long? Kipling is the model of the patient parent in the face of constant questions. And who cares about evolution? This is much more fun.

    12) A Journey to the Centre of the Earth -- Jules Verne (1864)

    Verne uses all the tricks that make Anthony Horowitz so successful – the action-packed chapters that end at just the right time and the sense of deepening mystery – but also a knack for convincing us that there really might be creatures down there.

    13) The Wind in the Willows -- Kenneth Grahame (1908)

    The idyllic, stylised account of life on the river, with anxious glimpses beyond it, is a masterclass in character-driven comedy – alongside the arriviste Toad is the petit bourgeois Mole, and Rat, the gentleman of leisure.

    14) The Doll People -- Ann M Martin and Laura Godwin (2000)

    The dolls in your dolls’ house might look inanimate to you, but you clearly have no idea of what they get up to at night. They’re casing the joint, tracking lost relatives and dodging that cruel fate – PDS (Permanent Doll State).

    15) The Child that Books Built  --Francis Spufford (2002)

    Although this book isn’t written for children, the more reflective might enjoy it as a guide on how to grow into reading; and it’s a wonderfully eloquent take on how growing up happens unexpectedly.



    THE OTHER CONTENDERS

    1) The Sword in the Stone -- T H White (1938)
    2) The Secret Garden -- Frances Hodgson Burnett (1911)
    3) Stig of the Dump -- Clive King (1963)
    4) Heidi -- Johanna Spyri (1880)
    5) Harry Potter and the Philosopher’s Stone -- J K Rowling (1997)
    6) How the Whale Became -- Ted Hughes (1963)
    7) The Velveteen Rabbit --Margery Williams (1922)
    8) The Phantom Tollbooth -- Norton Juster (1961)
    9) A Boy and a Bear in a Boat Rhymes -- Dave Shelton (2012)
    10) The Little White Horse -- Elizabeth Goudge (1946)

  • itsdone

    2014-6-8 20:39:44 使用道具

    有趣的討論,學習了!
  • Elizabeth

    2014-6-24 22:49:36 使用道具

    因为作者是英国人,不参加美国的评奖。令我想到一点,如果将来孩子想去英联邦学习,要侧重英国的作家。换言之,去美国要侧重阅读美国作家。稍有所侧重就可以了。
  • yuyiping

    2014-9-3 12:23:37 使用道具

    happy potter 好看
  • 阿春1008

    2014-10-6 17:30:34 使用道具

    这个讨论很有好处,我稍感安慰,我从来不会因为某个奖项去看书或给孩子看书。呵呵,感觉很多名著很boring
  • tina_zying

    2014-10-7 09:41:24 使用道具

    非常有意义的讨论,读书还是根据个人的兴趣爱好和特点。。。
  • 春之韵

    2014-10-8 08:15:12 使用道具

    纽奖的作者必须是美国公民啊,如果孩子想学美语,纽奖作品是不错的选择。
  • 春之韵

    2014-10-8 08:18:03 使用道具

    孩子在美国读书,上六年级,今年暑假的阅读作业就是纽奖作品“hoot”
  • bluecroco

    2014-11-5 23:02:54 使用道具

    反正都是英语的,有时间我认为都要看下.哈利波特的中文版 二年级下已经看完.
  • magician

    2014-11-19 20:13:38 使用道具

    好玩的书都没奖~
  • stevenyao1sina

    2016-5-31 09:00:42 使用道具

    纽奖作品经典又好看
  • standofjewel

    2017-7-24 17:01:21 使用道具

    谢谢,学习了!!