The 2018 New York Times/New York Public Library best illustrated children’s books
We invite you to take a look at this year’s winners…
Since 1952, we’ve convened a rotating annual panel of three expert judges, who consider every illustrated children’s book published that year in the United States. They select the winners purely on the basis of artistic merit. The judges this time were Leonard Marcus, a children’s literature historian and critic; Jenny Rosenoff, a children’s librarian at the New York Public Library; and Bryan Collier, the author and illustrator of many acclaimed picture books and a past winner of the award.
Below you’ll find images from each winning book, with commentary from the judges.
[See photos of the artists at work in their studios.]
DREAMERS
Written and illustrated by Yuyi Morales
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Morales’s colorful collages create a wonderful dreamlike effect in this powerful story of a mother and child leaving Mexico on an unexpected journey in search of a new life. — B.C.
Neal Porter Books/Holiday House, 32 pp., $18.99
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FLORETTE
Written and illustrated by Anna Walker
Anna Walker’s earth-toned, claustrophobic cityscapes are overtaken by lush greenery, giving glorious visual representation to the increasing hopefulness of a little girl settling into her new urban landscape. — J.R.
Clarion Books, 32 pp., $16.99.
AYOBAMI AND THE NAMES OF THE ANIMALS
Written by Pilar Lopez Avila
Illustrated by Mar Azabal
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In this beautiful gem about a girl who wants to learn to read, letters burst forth from imagery done in cut-paper collage and a rainbow of color, each page telling its own story with a quiet, understated voice. — B.C.
Cuento de Luz Books, 32 pp., $16.95.
THE FOREST
Written by Riccardo Bozzi
Illustrated by Violeta Lopiz and Valerio Vidali
Like a fairy-tale walk in the woods, “The Forest” is a thrilling visual excursion into uncharted territory featuring elaborate die-cuts, gatefolds and embossed images created by two artists from Italy and Spain. — L.M.
Enchanted Lion Books, 72 pp., $24.95.
A HOUSE THAT ONCE WAS
Written by Julie Fogliano
Illustrated by Lane Smith
In this tale of children who discover an abandoned house, Lane Smith’s deftly layered and lyrical pictorial world shimmers with a whirr of woodland color and line work that caroms from wispy to razor-sharp. — L.M.
Roaring Brook Press, 48 pp., $18.99.
OUR CAR
Written by J. M. Brum
Illustrated by Jan Bajtlik
Less is way more in the Polish artist Jan Bajtlik’s exhilarating, toy-bright ode to vehicles that don’t just go, they positively grip the road. — L.M.
Neal Porter/Roaring Brook Press, 32 pp., $16.99.
SHE MADE A MONSTER: How Mary Shelley Created Frankenstein
Written by Lynn Fulton
Illustrated by Felicita Sala
Felicita Sala’s archly horror-struck portraits and faux-eerie settings open a magnificent, cobwebbed window into the English novelist Mary Shelley’s wild and fiery imagination. — L.M.
Knopf, 40 pp., $17.99.
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THE FUNERAL
Written and illustrated by Matt James
Matt James’s colorful acrylics and playful collage lend a youthful exuberance to a normally dreary subject, giving poignant insight into a child’s understanding of the adult world. — J.R.
Groundwood Books, 40 pp., $18.95.
RUN WILD
Written and illustrated by David Covell
Running at top speed and with reckless abandon, Covell’s watercolors and handwritten text take us on a madcap, carefree adventure through nature’s wide-open spaces. — J.R.
Viking, 40 pp., $17.99.
THE VISITOR
Written and illustrated by Antje Damm
In Antje Damm’s remarkable “The Visitor,” a boy rushes into a lonely woman’s black-and-white 3-D collage world, bringing an explosion of color, light and life. — B.C.
Gecko Press, 32 pp., $17.99.