"Dyamonde, a third grader, has "wild-crazy hair," is "skinnier than half a toothpick" and is more than equal to the challenge of entering the crowded field of confident grade school heroines."—New York TimesDyamonde Daniel may be new in town, but that doesn't stop her from making a place for herself in a jiffy. With her can-do attitude and awesome brain power she takes the whole neighborhood by storm. The only thing puzzling her is the other new kid in her class. He's grouchy - but Dyamonde's determined to get to the bottom of his attitude and make a friend.
Nikki Grimes is the award-winning,
New York Times bestselling author of dozens of children’s and young adult books as well as a poet and journalist. Among the many accolades she has received are the Golden Dolphin Award (2005),the NCTE Award for Excellence in Poetry for Children (2006), the Coretta Scott King Award (2003) for
Bronx Masquerade, and the Horace Mann Upstanders Award (2011) for
Almost Zero: A Dyamonde Daniel Book. Additionally, her book
Barack Obama: Son of Promise, Child of Hope (illustrated by Bryan Collier) was a
New York Times bestseller, and she was acknowledged as an NAACP Image Award Finalist in 1993 for her book
Malcolm X: a Force for Change. Her books
Meet Danitra Brown (illustrated by Floyd Cooper),
Jazmin's Notebook,
Talkin' About Bessie (illustrated by E.B. Lewis),
Dark Sons,
The Road to Paris, and
Words with Wings were each awarded Coretta Scott King Honors. Nikki Grimes won the Children's Literature Legacy Award, which honors an author or illustrator whose books have made a substantial and lasting contribution to literature for children over a period of years. Visit her online at www.nikkigrimes.com.
R. Gregory Christie was named a top children's book illustrator by the
New York Times and has received three Coretta Scott King Honors. He has illustrated numerous picture books, including
The Deaf Musicians (by Pete Seeger and Paul DuBois Jacobs), which received the Schneider Family Book Award. He has illustrated the biographies of many historical and cultural figures, and he frequently lectures at schools across the country. He lives in Brooklyn, NY.
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"Dyamonde, a third grader, has "wild-crazy hair," is "skinnier than half a toothpick" and is more than equal to the challenge of entering the crowded field of confident grade school heroines."—
New York Times