The Vermont Golden Dome Book Award (formerly the Dorothy Canfield Fisher Children's Book Award) annually recognizes one new American children's book selected by the vote of Vermont schoolchildren. It was inaugurated in 1957.
The award is co-sponsored by the Vermont State PTA and the Vermont Department of Libraries and was originally named after the Vermont writer Dorothy Canfield Fisher. In 2020, it was temporarily renamed the "VT Middle-Grade Book Award" before schoolchildren voted to officially call it the "Vermont Golden Dome Book Award".
Each spring a committee of eight adults selects a "Master List" of thirty books first published during the previous calendar year. The list is announced at the annual Dorothy Canfield Fisher Conference, usually in May, and is available at Vermont school and public libraries for children who wish to participate over the next eleven months. The following spring, those children who have read at least five of the thirty books are eligible to vote for the award, with a deadline in mid-April. The award ceremony is scheduled after the end of the school year, usually late June. Thus the award is always for books published two years previously.
The winning writer is invited to visit Vermont to speak with children about the experience of writing for children.[1]
Vermont sponsors two other statewide book awards determined by the votes of younger and older students.
The Red Clover Book Award recognizes a picture book published two years earlier. Voters are children in grades K–4 who have read, or heard read aloud, all 10 books on the list. The Red Clover BA was established by 1997–98, if not earlier, and its 2014 winner was announced by May. It is the centerpiece of a one-day conference in October.
The Green Mountain Book Award is voted by high school students (grades 9–12, routinely ages 14–18) either through a school library or individually online, deadline May 31. Students are asked to vote only once and to read at least 3 from a list of 15 books (for 2014, published 2008–2012; for 2015, published 2011–2013). The Green Mountain BA was inaugurated in 2006.
One book by a single writer has won the Vermont Golden Dome Book Award every year since 1957.
1957 | Old Bones, the Wonder Horse | |||
1958 | Fifteen | |||
1959 | Comanche of the Seventh | |||
1960 | Double or Nothing | |||
1961 | Captain Ghost | |||
1962 | City under the Back Steps | |||
1963 | ||||
1964 | Bristle Face | |||
1965 | Rascal | |||
1966 | Ribsy | |||
1967 | ||||
1968 | ||||
1969 | Two in the Wilderness | |||
1970 | Kävik the Wolf Dog | |||
1971 | Go to the Room of the Eyes | |||
1972 | Flight of the White Wolf | |||
1973 | Never Steal a Magic Cat | |||
1974 | Catch a Killer | |||
1975 | ||||
1976 | ||||
1977 | ||||
1978 | Summer of Fear | |||
1979 | Kid Power | |||
1980 | Bones on Black Spruce Mountain | |||
1981 | Bunnicula | |||
1982 | ||||
1983 | Tiger Eyes | |||
1984 | ||||
1985 | Dear Mr. Henshaw | |||
1986 | ||||
1987 | ||||
1988 | Wait Till Helen Comes | |||
1989 | Hatchet | |||
1990 | Where It Stops, Nobody Knows | |||
1991 | Number the Stars | |||
1992 | Maniac Magee | |||
1993 | Shiloh | |||
1994 | Jennifer Murdley's Toad | |||
1995 | ||||
1996 | Time for Andrew | |||
1997 | Mick Harte Was Here | |||
1998 | ||||
1999 | Ella Enchanted | |||
2000 | Holes | |||
2001 | Bud, Not Buddy | |||
2002 | Because of Winn-Dixie | |||
2003 | Love That Dog | |||
2004 | Loser | |||
2005 | ||||
2006 | ||||
2007 | Flush | |||
2008 | Diary of a Wimpy Kid | |||
2009 | Rules | |||
2010 | ||||
2011 | 11 Birthdays | |||
2012 | Smile | |||
2013 | ||||
2014 | Wonder | |||
2015 | Escape from Mr. Lemoncello's Library | |||
2016 | El Deafo | |||
2017 | and Mac Barnett | [2] | ||
2018 | Projekt 1065 | [3] | ||
2019 | Refugee | [4] | ||
2020 | Small Spaces |
Several writers have won more than one DCF Award: Beverly Cleary in 1958, 1966, and 1985; Mary Downing Hahn in 1988, 1996, and 2006; Jerry Spinelli and Kate DiCamillo and Alan Gratz twice each.
Seven times from 1985 to 2005, and no others, the schoolchildren selected the winner of the annual Newbery Medal (dated one year earlier, established 1922). That award by the Association for Library Service to Children recognizes the year's "most distinguished contribution to American literature for children". The first agreement of Vermont children with U.S. children's librarians was their 1985 selection of Dear Mr. Henshaw by Cleary and there were six more such agreements during the next twenty years to 2005.[5]
In 2018, there was a call from the Vermont Library Board to change the name of the award to no longer honor Dorothy Canfield Fisher, following a report that she had ties to Vermont's eugenics movement.[6] [7] In April 2019, the Vermont Department of Libraries announced that the award would be renamed in 2020.[8] It was temporarily renamed the "VT Middle-Grade Book Award".[9] [10] In November 2020, it was officially renamed the "Vermont Golden Dome Book Award" after a vote by Vermont elementary school students.[11] [12]