Death by Newbery Medal/Quotes

Everything About Fiction You Never Wanted to Know.


The Last Guardian is going to be great. Nobody's arguing that. But there's only two ways that game is going to end. The boy dies, or the baby gryphon dies.
The one thing I hate about animal stories is that after you've almost read the entire book and you really care about the animal, they go and tell you about how the animal died.
—Stacy O'Brien in Wesley The Owl, as the chapter about Wesley's death of advanced old age begins.
Obviously, until you write Fuck it, We're All Going To Die, the Newbery Medal will go to people like me, Stephen.
Of the 25 winners and runners-up chosen from 2000 to 2005, four of the books deal with death, six with the absence of one or both parents and four with such mental challenges as autism. Most of the rest deal with tough social issues.
The Newbery has probably done far more to turn kids off to reading than any other book award in children's publishing.
—John Beach, associate professor of literacy education at St John's University
I have a bad feeling that they're only letting you have a dog in order to murder it later, leaving players devastated.
When I was a kid, someone told me the end of The Giver was ambiguous, which surprised me. I had just assumed Jonah died--because the book had a medal on the cover, and I knew grown-ups liked stories where sad stuff happens at the end for no reason.

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  1. He was right.