Sanna Pelliccioni awarded the Plaque Award

Sanna Pelliccioni has been awarded the Plaque Award by Biennal of Illustrations Bratislava for her illustrations in children’s picture book Sent Across The Sea.

Sent Across The Sea

The international jury has chosen Sanna Pelliccioni’s illustrations to Sent Across the Sea as the winner of the Plaque Award. The jury emphasizes the tender, nuanced illustrations that transmit the feeling to the reader. “Pelliccioni’s delicate, mostly rosy and light blue colouring makes the book an artistic whole with its own aesthetics.”

Pelliccioni’s award is the first one granted to a Finnish illustrator by The Biennal of Illustrations Bratislava (BIB) in 35 years. The Bratislava Biennal is the largest exhibition and competition of illustrations in the whole of Europe, and it is organized by IBBY, the International Board of Books for Young People.

The book, written by author Eppu Nuotio, follows Heidi, who must leave home and travel far across the sea to be safe from the war. In the new country Heidi is separated from her brother and ends up living with a grumpy couple. Heidi can’t understand the language of her new aunt and uncle, but she does understand they’d want her to act differently.

Luckily, Heidi gets to spend a day with her brother and his family, and the brother immediately understands that Heidi needs to find a nicer auntie.

Based on real memories, Sent across the Sea is a story of an often-forgotten period in Finnish history: Around 80,000 children were evacuated from Finland during the Second World War, mainly to Sweden. Most of them returned home, but more than 15‚000 did not. In a Europe at war, their story resonates again.

Anna Glad series to continue in Germany | 4th book acquired by Aufbau

Thrilling news for our crime readers: the Anna Glad series by Eva Frantz will be continuing in Germany, as Aufbau has recently acquired even the 4th book in the series, You Will Not Take My Child.

You Will Never Take My Child by EVA FRANTZ

In the 4th instalment of the series Anna Glad is juggling her roles as a parent of a toddler and a senior detective, with varying degrees of success. There are several suspicious deaths happening around the city, a school secretary is missing and something is at odds at the closed school building, soon to be demolished. Anna’s partner Tomas, stay-at-home dad, is like a rock to lean on, but is he a little too interested in the life of his new friend playground parent friend Mimmi Sandberg? Mimmi is 4-year-old Veera’s foster mother, and now Veera’s biological mother wants her custody back. Is Mimmi’s home as safe as she herself wants to believe?

Congratulations to the author!

Matara by Matias Riikonen | Jarkko Laine award

Fantastic news from the Turku Book Fair: Matara by Matias Riikonen has been awarded the Jarkko Laine prize.

Matara by Matias Riikonen

The jury has motivated their choice as follows:

“In Matara by Matias Riikonen boys under the age of 15 spend long summer days in a present-day forest in Finland, where they have built the republic of Matara. The state, which strongly reminds of Ancient Rome, is built on rules, hierarchies and systems which are portrayed with startling intensity. In this violent world rules are followed even when it comes to fighting and on the side of struggles for power loyalty, friendship, fun and games emerge. The detailed description of the boys’ world, the precision of their observations, the flow of the story and the emotional thrill are successfully realized in Riikonen’s striking prose”.

Matara has already been acquired in Denmark and Hungary, and for World French and German, and it has been previously awarded the Torch-Bearer prize.

In Finland the book is published by Teos.

Warmest congratulations to the author!

The Skeleton sold to Latvia | 3rd foreign sale for the title

Thrilling news for our children’s list: The Skeleton by Malin Klingenberg and Maria Sann has been sold to Latvia, where it will be published by Zvaigzne ABC. This marks the 3rd foreign sale for the title, which has previously been sold to Korea and to World Dutch.

The book follows Theo, who is not fond of spooky skeletons: when he is invited to a costume party at his friend Roni’s house, he is terrified of the skeleton costume worn by the host. He tries to make a run for it, but he trips and falls. There’s nothing to do but go see the doctor and take x-rays. 

Let’s have a look at your skeleton, says the doctor. Teo is horrified: is there a skeleton inside me? Of course there is, his mother whispers tenderly. But Teo is chilled to the bone. Is there a skeleton inside everyone? What if the little brother living inside Mommy’s tummy sees her skeleton and is frightened?

Skeleton is a tenderly told story about a child overcoming his fears while learning what each of us is made of. Sometimes parts of us break and need to be fixed with a cast.

Congratulations to the authors!