Current:Home > ScamsRoxanna Asgarian’s ‘We Were Once a Family’ and Amanda Peters’ ‘The Berry Pickers’ win library medals -×
Roxanna Asgarian’s ‘We Were Once a Family’ and Amanda Peters’ ‘The Berry Pickers’ win library medals
View
Date:2025-04-16 06:53:11
NEW YORK (AP) — In the childhood home of author Roxanna Asgarian, there were restrictions on how often the television could be on and which programs could be watched.
Books were placed under a much looser set of rules.
“Mom would take us to the library and gave us totally free reign,” says Asgarian, a Las Vegas native who is now a freelance journalist in Dallas. She is one of this year’s winners of an Andrew Carnegie Medal for Excellence, presented by the American Library Association.
“There were no limits and that was very helpful to me because I could follow my interests; I read Roald Dahl’s books, one by one. I think when it comes to books and readings you have to be able to find what’s interesting to you and pursue that. It helps you come to a love of reading. ”
On Saturday, the library association announced that Asgarian had won the nonfiction medal for “We Were Once A Family: Love, Death, and Child Removal in America,” her investigation into the Hart family murder-suicide from 2018, when a couple drove off a cliff with their six adopted children in the back. The fiction medal was awarded to Amanda Peters for her novel “The Berry Pickers,” a multi-generational story centered around the disappearance of a young Mi’kmaq girl from a blueberry field in Maine.
Each winner receives $5,000 and will be honored in June during the ALA’s annual conference, being held this year in San Diego.
“Amanda Peters’ stunning prose and evocative narrative enraptured us with the grief and longing of her characters. Roxanna Asgarian’s blending of journalism, narrative nonfiction, and heartbreak tears back the veil on the child removal systems in the United States,” Aryssa Damron, chair of the awards’ selection committee, said in a statement.
Finalists for the Carnegie prizes were Jesmyn Ward’s “Let Us Descend” and Christina Wong’s and Daniel Innes’ “Denison Avenue” in fiction, and Jake Bittle’s “The Great Displacement: Climate Change and the Next American Migration” and Darrin Bell’s “The Talk” in nonfiction.
Peters, a native of Falmouth, Nova Scotia, has been a library patron for much of her life and received a master’s in library and information studies from Dalhousie University. Now an associate professor at Acadia University in Wolfville, Nova Scotia, she remembers her high school library as the setting for a personal breakthrough: When she checked out a copy of John Steinbeck’s “Of Mice and Men,” the classic novella about two migrant workers and the tragedies that overcome them.
“I was 16 and sitting in the library and it changed the trajectory of my reading career,” said Peters, who read the book at home. “It was such an emotional read. I had enjoyed books before, but this made me realize what a book can really do. It can make you feel so intensely. My mom came into my bedroom and I was crying, and she was like, ‘What’s wrong?’”
Peters says when she travels she still likes to visit a library before even going to a bookstore, sometimes looking through a given title at the library and deciding whether eventually to buy it. During a trip to New York City while she was working on “The Berry Pickers,” she visited the famed research section of the 5th Avenue branch of the New York Public Library.
“I was there (in New York) with some friends and they went shopping, but I wanted to visit the library so I took my computer and sat for a couple hours and wrote,” she said. “Such a beautiful spot.”
Asgarian said that Houston’s African American History Research Center was vital for her reporting in “Once We Were a Family,” part of which is set in the city’s historic Fourth Ward, a former Black Freedmen’s Town established after the Civil War. The library was once a Black elementary school, attended by some of the people in her book.
“The research center was super, super valuable to me because of all the historical documents it held and the news clippings about the neighborhood,” Asgarian said.
The Carnegie Medals were established in 2012 with the help of a grant from Carnegie Corporation of New York. Previous winners include Jennifer Egan, James McBride and Bryan Stevenson.
veryGood! (622)
Related
- Angelina Jolie nearly fainted making Maria Callas movie: 'My body wasn’t strong enough'
- Apartment fire in northwestern Spain kills 4 people, including 3 children
- Are terrorists trying to enter the U.S. through the southern border? Here are the facts.
- Sen. Tim Scott says $6 billion released in Iran prisoner swap created market for hostages
- Tree trimmer dead after getting caught in wood chipper at Florida town hall
- Biden administration proposes rule to ban junk fees: Americans are fed up
- St. Louis launches program to pay $500 a month to lower-income residents
- Human remains, other evidence recovered from Titan submersible wreckage
- Working Well: When holidays present rude customers, taking breaks and the high road preserve peace
- Voting begins in Ohio in the only election this fall to decide abortion rights
Ranking
- Former longtime South Carolina congressman John Spratt dies at 82
- 'Top moment': Young fan overjoyed as Keanu Reeves plays catch with him before Dogstar show
- Suspect in pro cyclist’s shooting in Texas briefly runs from officers at medical appointment
- 11 high school students arrested over huge brawl in middle of school day
- Toyota to invest $922 million to build a new paint facility at its Kentucky complex
- Texas man who killed woman in 2000 addresses victim's family moments before execution: I sincerely apologize for all of it
- Amazon Influencers Share the Items They Always Subscribe & Save
- 'Anointed liquidator': How Florida man's Home Depot theft ring led to $1.4M loss, prosecutors say
Recommendation
Why we love Bear Pond Books, a ski town bookstore with a French bulldog 'Staff Pup'
Looking for last-minute solar eclipse glasses? These libraries and vendors can help
Entrance to Baltimore Washington International Airport closed due to law enforcement investigation
How Israel's geography, size put it in the center of decades of conflict
B.A. Parker is learning the banjo
NASA shows off its first asteroid samples delivered by a spacecraft
Families in Israel and abroad wait in agony for word of their loved ones taken hostage by militants
Stock market today: Asian shares rise after eased pressure on bonds pushes Wall Street higher