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2015 Oklahoma Book Awards

Julie Rushing, Cheryl E.B. Wattley, Dondi Rodgers (for Greg Rodgers), Anthony Roberts, Rennard Strickland, Will Thomas, Jessica Isaacs, Roy Deering, and Hannah E. Harrison

Writers, publishers, and reading enthusiasts across the state met at the Jim Thorpe Museum and Oklahoma Sports Hall of Fame on Saturday, April 11, 2015, for the 26th Annual Oklahoma Book Awards.

Awards were given in the children/young adult; design, illustration, and photography; fiction; non-fiction; and poetry.

Oklahoma educator, historian, poet, and storyteller Rennard Strickland received the Arrell Gibson Lifetime Achievement Award.

View the evening's program (PDF).

The evening would not have been possible without the generous support of the Friends of the Oklahoma Center for the Book.

Moreover, this year's Shakespearean sponsors were Dunlap Codding and the Osage Nation. The Hemingway sponsors were Bob Burke for Oklahoma Heritage Association Publishing, Betty C. Hatcher, The Roadrunner Press, and Laurie Williams. Williams received the Glenda Carlile Distinguished Service Award at the dinner for her support of the Book Awards, and for her contributions to the Center’s Letters About Literature reading and writing program for Oklahoma students.

The event is sponsored each year by the Oklahoma Center for the Book in the Oklahoma Department of Libraries, a state affiliate of the Center for the Book in the Library of Congress, and the Friends of the Oklahoma Center for the Book. The awards recognize books written the previous year by Oklahomans or about Oklahoma.

The 2015 Oklahoma Book Awards program book is available upon request.


2015 Winners

Children

Chukfi Rabbit’s Big, Bad Bellyache: A Trickster Tale
Greg Rodgers
Cinco Puntos Press

When Bear, Turtle, Fox, and Beaver agree on an everybody-work-together day to build Ms. Possum a new house, Chukfi Rabbit says he’s too busy to help. (Everyone knows that Chuckfi Rabbit is really just too “lay-zeeee” to help!) When Chukfi hears there will be a feast after the work is done, he changes his mind. Not that he plans to actually work. But this greedy trickster will soon learn that being lazy is hard work! The late Greg Rodgers was born and bred in Oklahoma. A storyteller and a writer, he loved sharing his Choctaw heritage with people of all ages.

Young Adult

Finders Keepers
Roy Deering

The RoadRunner Press

When Mr. Martin hires his son’s friend, Tomás, to clear out the family’s old vacant Five & Dime store, he tells the boy he can keep whatever he finds. But when Tomás finds six valuable boxes of old Topps baseball cards in pristine condition, all bets are off. The cards are worth millions, and now Mr. Martin wants them for his own. Soon, everyone in the small Texas town is either taking sides or trying to get their hands on the treasure. Deering is a middle school English teacher and a lifelong baseball fan and card collector. Before teaching, he spent more than twenty years as a journalist. He lives in Ada with his family.

The following books were selected as finalists in the Oklahoma Book Award Competition. The books are listed in alphabetical order according to the last name of the lead author/illustrator/designer/photographer.

Some Assembly Required
Arin Andrews

Simon & Schuster

C is for Chickasaw
Wiley Barnes

Chickasaw Press

The Black Sentry
William Bernhardt

Babylon Books

Finders Keepers
Roy Deering

RoadRunner Press

Rethinking Normal
Katie Rain Hill

Simon & Schuster

George Ferris: What a Wheel
Barbara Lowell

Penguin

Chukfi Rabbit’s Big, Bad Bellyache: A Trickster Tale
Greg Rodgers

Cinco Puntos Press

Design

A Legacy in Arms
book design by Julie Rushing
jacket design by Anthony Roberts

University of Oklahoma Press

Beautifully designed weapons are saluted with this carefully designed book. A clear and meticulous logic guided Rushing as she set out to showcase the elegant and elaborate firearms that have been part of America’s story. Roberts’s evocative cover draws the reader in. Rushing is production designer, and Roberts is graphic designer, at the University of Oklahoma Press in Norman.

Illustration

Extraordinary Jane
illustrated by Hannah E. Harrison

Penguin

Harrison’s delightful paintings bring the joy of a circus to storytime. The fun begins with the whimsical “wallpaper” endsheets that depict ordinary puppy Jane attempting a variety of circus stunts. Harrison is an award-winning painter, specializing in animal subjects. This is the first picture book she has written and illustrated. She grew up in New Hampshire, and now lives in Ada with her husband and daughter.

The following books were selected as finalists in the Oklahoma Book Award Competition. The books are listed in alphabetical order according to the last name of the lead author/illustrator/designer/photographer.

Chikasha: The Chickasaw Collection at the National Museum of the American Indian
photography by Matt Bradbury and Mike McKee
book design by Corey Fetters

Chickasaw Press

Capturing the Spirit in Bronze: The Journey and Sculptures of Rosalind Cook
book design by Patricia Ridge Bradley

Rosalind Cook Studio

Art of the Oklahoma Judicial Center
book design and photography by Neil Chapman

Supreme Court of Oklahoma

Extraordinary Jane
illustrated by Hannah E. Harrison

Penguin

C is for Chickasaw
illustrated by Aaron Long

Chickasaw Press

A Legacy in Arms
book design by Julie Rushing
jacket design by Anthony Roberts

University of Oklahoma Press

The Early Chickasaw Homeland
cover and book design by Aaron Long

Chickasaw Press

Chukfi Rabbit’s Big, Bad Bellyache: A Trickster Tale
illustrated by Leslie Stall Widener

Cinco Puntos Press

Poetry

Deep August
Jessica Isaacs

Village Books Press

Isaacs’s collection is a study in contrasts. Her poems are raw, yet lyrical; scorching, yet icy; rooted in reality, yet gazing at the stars. Isaacs is an English professor at Seminole State College, where she serves as the director of the annual Howlers & Yawpers Creativity Symposium. She is a member of the coordinating committee for the Woody Guthrie Poets, and has been published in various journals and anthologies. She has lived in Oklahoma all of her life, and currently resides in Prague with her husband, kids, dogs, cats, and fish.

The following books were selected as finalists in the Oklahoma Book Award Competition. The books are listed in alphabetical order according to the last name of the lead author/illustrator/designer/photographer.

Oklahoma Poems…And Their Poets
edited by Nathan Brown

Mezcalita Press

Words of Rain
James Coburn

BlaqRayn Publishing

Deep August
Jessica Isaacs

Village Books Press

The Walmart Republic
Quraysh Ali Lansana and Christopher Stewart

Mongrel Empire Press

Its Day Being Gone
Rose McLarney

Penguin

Re-Writing Family History
Linda Neal Reising

Finishing Line Press

Non-Fiction

A Step Toward Brown v. Board of Education: Ada Lois Sipuel Fisher and Her Fight to End Segregation
Cheryl Elizabeth Brown Wattley

University of Oklahoma Press

Wattley gives us a richly textured picture of the black-and-white world from which Ada Lois Sipuel and her family emerged, from slavery under the Five Civilized Tribes to the establishment of autonomous black communities in the segregated state of Oklahoma. Against this background, Wattley shows Sipuel (who married Warren Fisher a year before she filed her suit) struggling against a segregated educational system. Sipuel Fisher challenged the OU College of Law’s policy forbidding the admittance of African American students. Wattley takes the reader through the legal challenges that ended with the U.S. Supreme Court decision that struck another blow against segregation. Wattley is Professor of Law and Director of Experiential Learning at the University of North Texas, Dallas, College of Law.

The following books were selected as finalists in the Oklahoma Book Award Competition. The books are listed in alphabetical order according to the last name of the lead author/illustrator/designer/photographer.

The Nicest Nazi: Childhood Memories of World War II
Christiane Brandt Faris

Ionic Press

Black Cat 2-1: The True Story of a Vietnam Helicopter Pilot and His Crew
Bob Ford

Brown Books Publishing Group

Oklahoma’s Most Notorious Cases
Kent Frates

RoadRunner Press

Port Robertson: Behind the Scenes of Sooner Sports
Edgar L. Frost

Oklahoma Heritage Association

Chikasha: The Chickasaw Collection at the National Museum of the American Indian
Joshua Hinson

Chickasaw Press

Father of Route 66: The Story of Cy Avery
Susan Croce Kelly

University of Oklahoma Press

Piavinnia: The Bent-Guerrier Connection
Jo Ann Kessel

Oklahoma Heritage Association

A Step Toward Brown v. Board of Education: Ada Lois Sipuel Fisher and her Fight to End Segregation
Cheryl Elizabeth Brown Wattley

University of Oklahoma Press

Fiction

Fatal Enquiry
Will Thomas

Minotaur Books

The sixth novel in Thomas’s Cyrus Barker/Thomas Llewellyn series, set in Victorian London, is also the author’s sixth honor as an Oklahoma Book Award finalist. He received the 2004 Oklahoma Book Award for Some Danger Involved. In the latest installment, the private enquiry agent and his assistant are threatened by an old nemesis, Nightwine, who is planning to unleash his most deadly scheme yet. Thomas works as a librarian in Tulsa. He lives in Broken Arrow with his family.

The following books were selected as finalists in the Oklahoma Book Award Competition. The books are listed in alphabetical order according to the last name of the lead author/illustrator/designer/photographer.

Popsicle Styx
John T. Biggs

Pen-L Publishing

Hell with the Lid Blown Off
Donis Casey

Poisoned Pen Press

Jingo Street
Sharon Ervin

Oak Tree Press

Her Innocent War
Betty C. Hatcher

Frugal Press

Sinking Suspicions
Sara Sue Hoklotubbe

University of Arizona Press

The Hatmaker’s Heart
Carla Stewart

Faith Words Press

House of Purple Cedar
Tim Tingle

Cinco Puntos Press

Fatal Enquiry
Will Thomas

Minotaur Books

The event is sponsored each year by the Oklahoma Center for the Book in the Oklahoma Department of Libraries, a state affiliate of the Center for the Book in the Library of Congress, and the Friends of the Oklahoma Center for the Book. The awards recognize books written the previous year by Oklahomans or about Oklahoma.


Last Modified on Jul 29, 2022
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