03 July 2024
Hisham Matar wins The Orwell Prize for Political Fiction
Congratulations to Hisham Matar for winning this year’s Orwell Prize for Political Fiction for his novel My Friends (Viking)
My Friends by Matar—chosen from a shortlist of eight novels—explores the fallout of the 1984 shootings at the Libyan embassy in London, and its effect on three Libyan friends living in exile in Britain.
Alexandra Harris, who chaired the political fiction panel, said: "My Friends is a work of grace, gentleness, beauty and intellect, offered in the face of blunt violence and tyranny. The shootings at the Libyan embassy in London in 1984 reverberate through the novel, defining the lives of young men who cannot risk return to their families and their native country. Matar’s response to those gunshots is a richly sustained meditation on exile and friendship, love and distance, deepening with each page as layers of recollection and experience accrue."
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03 July 2024
Isabella Hammad wins the RSL Encore Award
Isabella Hammad has won the newly boosted RSL Encore Award for her second novel Enter Ghost (Vintage), now worth £15,000.
The Encore RSL award celebrates the second novel, marking the achievements of authors moving beyond their literary debuts. It was first presented in 1990 and has been administrated by the RSL since 2016.
Hammad said said: "Everyone loves a debut, but I think it may actually be in the tricky transition from the first book to the second that a writer really becomes a writer. The second novel is also a famously hard moment for writers who are still at the beginning of their careers, so prizes like this are incredibly valuable for both the material support they offer and the recognition."
Enter Ghost follows Sonia, a British Palestinian actress who flees a failed marriage and love affair in London to stay with her sister in the West Bank.
The judges described the book "as profound as it is powerful, exploring in beautiful prose the essential, humanising importance of art in a world overthrown by conflict".
They added: "In a voice that is always original Hammad takes one of th...
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03 July 2024
Tom Crewe, Fiona Benson and Cecile Pin win Society of Author Awards
Congratulations to all the winners of this year's Society of Authors Awards! Especially -
Fiona Benson for winning a Cholmondeley Award which recognises poets’ sustained excellence across a body of work. "The Cholmondeley Awards prove that excellence can be perceived across a wide range of poetry from a diversity of poets. It is hoped that the recipients will feel valued, encouraged and truly celebrated."
Cecile Pin for winning a Somerset Maugham Award. The judges said "this year’s Somerset Maugham Award shortlist was made up of young voices who used poetry, non-fiction, fiction, or other forms entirely, to explore history in unique fashions and to tell stories that document the present, reveal the author’s psyche, delve deep into our emotions and take us down roads of imaginative brilliance."
Tom Crewe for winning a Betty Trask Award. The judges praised The New Life as "a brilliantly complex and moving novel that does what the best historical fiction does: bringing the past alive in your head and your heart. It’s extraordinary to read a debut novel that has such subtlety, such range of both language and feeling. Ra...
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24 April 2024
Anne Enright and Isabella Hammad shortlisted for Women's Prize for Fiction 2024
Anne Enright and Isabella Hammad are among the writers shortlisted for this year’s Women’s prize for fiction. Irish author Anne Enright, who has been shortlisted for the prize twice, is shortlisted for a third time for The Wren, The Wren (Jonathan Cape), while British-Palestinian writer Isabella Hammad is shortlisted for her second novel, Enter Ghost (Vintage), which is about a production of Hamlet in the West Bank.
The winner of the 2024 Women’s Prize for Fiction will be announced on Thursday 13th June 2024 at the Women’s Prize Trust’s summer party in central London, along with the inaugural winner of the 2024 Women’s Prize for Non-Fiction. The winner will receive a cheque for £30,000, anonymously endowed, along with a limited-edition bronze statuette known as the "Bessie", created and donated by the artist Grizel Niven.
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22 April 2024
Pari Thomson's Greenwild wins Waterstones Children’s Book Prize
Pari Thomson has been named the Overall Winner of the Waterstones Children’s Book Prize for her debut, the illustrated magical door fantasy Greenwild: The World Behind The Door (Macmillan Children’s Books), illustrated by Elisa Paganelli.
The prize is voted for by Waterstones booksellers and is now in its 20th year. The winner receives £5,000 and the promise of ongoing commitment to their writing and illustrating career.
“Pari Thomson’s debut enchanted our booksellers with its sweeping escapism and standard-setting lyrical world-building," commented Bea Carvalho, head of books at Waterstones. "At once a fast-paced adventure story and a heartfelt entreaty to care for the natural world, Greenwild is a timeless fantasy tale of friendship, mystery, and the magic and beauty to be found in nature."
Pari Thomson, who is also editorial director for picture books at Bloomsbury Children’s Books, added: “I am lucky enough to live near Kew Gardens in London, a place full of sparkling glasshouses and carnivorous plants and lily pads big enough to take a nap on. I have always felt that nature was a little bit magic — and Kew made me ask, what if it w...
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20 March 2024
Tom Crewe wins The Sunday Times Young Writer of the Year Award 2024
Debut novelist Tom Crewe has been named winner of the Sunday Times Charlotte Aitken Young Writer of the Year Award for The New Life (Chatto & Windus), a novel described by judge James McConnachie as “thrillingly intimate” and “a compassionate and tenderly sensual account of masculine sexuality”.
The New Life is set in 1894 while the Oscar Wilde trial is igniting public outcry, “and everything John and Henry have longed for is suddenly under threat,” the synopsis says. “United by a shared vision, the two begin work on a revolutionary book arguing for the legalisation of homosexuality.”
Judge Johanna Thomas-Corr, chief literary critic for the Times and Sunday Times, said: “Sometimes a début novel comes along that feels like an immediate classic – a book that you suddenly can’t imagine not existing. If you’ve read Tom Crewe’s bold and beautifully observed début, The New Life, you’ll know that it is just such a book. He is a writer of rare promise.”
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20 March 2024
Paul Murray wins inaugural Nero Gold Prize Book of the Year 2024
Paul Murray has won the £30,000 inaugural Nero Gold Prize Book of the Year for The Bee Sting (Hamish Hamilton), described as “a gripping saga of one highly dysfunctional family that asks if a single moment of bad luck – a patch of ice on the road, a bee caught beneath a bridal veil – can change the direction of a life”. Chair of judges Bernardine Evaristo presented Murray with the prize, describing The Bee Sting as a “wonderfully ambitious and entrancing novel about a family imploding, against a background of Ireland’s economic and social crisis of the late Noughties”.
Receiving the award Paul Murray said: "what an incredible honour, I’m really speechless" and, visibly emotional, dedicated the award to his father, who is unwell at the moment and wasn’t able to make the ceremony. He told journalists: "It’s the first Nero Prize [...] so there will never be another first winner, so that’s really wonderful and it’s a tremendous honour."
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20 March 2024
Anne Enright wins Writers' Prize for Fiction 2024
Anne Enright has won the fiction category in this year’s Writers’ Prize, formerly the Rathbones Folio Prize, at a ceremony at the London Book Fair for The Wren, The Wren (Jonathan Cape), a meditation on love and the love between mother and daughter – sometimes fierce, often painful, but always transcendent.
A statement read on her behalf said: "It’s lovely to be voted for as opposed to judged, don’t ask me why, it just feels simpler, broader, more robust. I look at the list of members in the Folio Society and realise my novel was brought to the attention of some of the writers whose work I admire most. And indeed that might have been enough."
Open to all works of literature, regardless of form, the award is the only international, English-language award nominated and judged purely by other writers. This year’s shortlists — which were revealed in January — and winners were decided entirely by the Folio Academy, made up of more than 350 writers. Previously known as the Rathbones Folio Prize, the award relaunched last year as The Writers’ Prize.
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20 March 2024
RCW authors shortlisted for 2024 British Book Awards
The shortlist for The British Book Awards 2024, also known as the Nibbies, has been announced. Chris van Tulleken is shortlisted in the Non-Fiction: Lifestyle & Illustrated category for his debut Ultra-Processed People (Cornerstone Press); Alice Oseman is shortlisted in the Children's Illustrated category for Heartstopper Volume 5 (Hachette Children's Books); Katherine Rundell and A.F. Steadman are both shortlisted in the Children's Fiction Book of the Year category for Impossible Creatures (Bloomsbury) and Skandar and the Phantom Rider (Simon & Schuster) respectively; and Katherine Rundell is shortlisted again in the Audiobook Fiction category with Impossible Creatures narrated by Samuel West, alongside the audiobook edition for Poor Things by Alasdair Gray, narrated by Russ Bain and Kathryn Drysdale (published by W.F. Howes).
The 12 category winners, and the winner of Overall Book of the Year, will be unveiled at a ceremony at Grosvenor House London on Monday 13th May. The category awards will be nominated by separate panels, with judges including Toby Jones, Nihal Arthanayake, Lorraine Kelly, Adrian Chiles and Yink...
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20 March 2024
Noreen Masud and Yan Ge longlisted for Jhalak Prize 2024
Noreen Masud and Yan Ge are among the writers longlisted for this year’s Jhalak Prize. Noreen Masud is longlisted for her book A Flat Place (Hamish Hamilton), a memoir that weaves reflections on Britain’s flatlands with poetry, history and insightful meditation on loss, identity and trauma, and Yan Ge for her English language debut, Elsewhere (Faber), which delves into themes of isolation through nine stories spanning from contemporary to ancient times, from China to Dublin to London and Stockholm, depicting strange and beguiling stories of dispossession, longing, and the diasporic experience.
The two Jhalak Prize awards celebrate writing by British/British resident BAME writers and annually award £1,000 to the winners. The shortlist for both awards will be announced on 18th April, with the winners revealed on 30th May.
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20 March 2024
László Krasznahorkai receives prestigious Spanish Formentor Literary Award
Renowned Hungarian writer László Krasznahorkai has been announced as the recipient of the prestigious Spanish Formentor international literary award 2024. The five-member jury praised the Hungarian writer’s “maintenance of a narrative force that envelops, reveals, conceals and transforms the reality of the world,” his ability to build fascinating labyrinths of literary imagination, and his detailed, slow-paced style, which “reflects the creative energy of a literature completely alien to the industrial influence of entertainment.”
The Formentor Literature Prize was established in 1961, to recognize the quality and integrity of works that consolidate the prestige and cultural impact of literature. Among the winners in the first years were, for instance, Samuel Beckett of Ireland and Jorge Luis Borges of Argentina. After a break of several decades, the prize was revived in 2011, and has been awarded to authors such as Nobel Prize winner Annie Ernaux of France, Ludmilla Ulickaya of Russia, and last year, to Pascal Quignard of France.
Several of László Krasznahorkai's notable works, including Tango Satánico, War and War, and Melancolía de la re...
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20 March 2024
Poor Things: Award Season Roundup
The film adaptation of Poor Things was met with acclaim during the latest awards season, scoring big in multiple categories. Based on Alasdair Gray's acclaimed novel, the film picked up prizes at the Academy Awards, BAFTAs, and Golden Globes, among others, winning across several categories including Best Actress and Best Production Design.
Set against the backdrop of a dark Victorian Glasgow, the Guardian Fiction Prize-winning novel Poor Things echoes the story of Mary Shelley’s Frankenstein and explores social inequalities, identity and our relationship to culture and heritage.
Adapted by screenwriter Tony McNamara, the film is directed by absurdist filmmaker Yorgos Lanthimos, behind The Lobster and Bafta and Oscar winning The Favourite. Starring as the lead is Emma Stone alongside Mark Ruffalo, Willem Dafoe, Ramy Youssef, Christopher Abbott, Margaret Qualley and Jerrod Carmichael.
Poor Things is now available to watch at home on Disney+.
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06 March 2024
Emily Perkins shortlisted for Jann Medlicott Acorn Prize for Fiction
Emily Perkins's novel Lioness (Bloomsbury) is shortlisted for the Jann Medlicott Acorn Prize for Fiction, as finalists in the 2024 Ockham New Zealand Book Awards are announced. The book explores the reality behind the facade in a seductive story of power, privilege and personal rebellion. Emily Perkins previously won the Montana Medal for Fiction or Poetry in 2009 for Novel About My Wife.
The 16 finalists were selected from a longlist of 44 books by panels of specialist judges across four categories: fiction, poetry, illustrated non-fiction, and general non-fiction.
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06 March 2024
Anne Enright and Isabella Hammad longlisted for Women's Prize for Fiction 2024
Anne Enright and Isabella Hammad are among the writers longlisted for this year’s Women’s prize for fiction. Irish author Anne Enright, who has been shortlisted for the prize twice, was longlisted a fifth time for The Wren, The Wren (Jonathan Cape), while British-Palestinian writer Hammad is longlisted for Enter Ghost (Vintage), which is about a production of Hamlet in the West Bank.
A shortlist of six titles will be announced on 24 April, and the winner will be announced on 13 June, along with the winner of the inaugural Women’s prize for non-fiction. The winning author will receive a cheque for £30,000 and a bronze statuette known as the “Bessie”, created by the artist Grizel Niven.
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27 February 2024
Tom Crewe, Victoria MacKenzie and Zadie Smith longlisted for Walter Scott Prize for Historical Fiction 2024
Zadie Smith’s The Fraud (Hamish Hamilton), Tom Crewe’s The New Life (Chatto & Windus) and Victoria MacKenzie’s For Thy Great Pain, Have Mercy On My Little Pain (Bloomsbury) are among the books longlisted for the 2024 Walter Scott Prize for Historical Fiction.
Honouring the achievements of the founding father of the historical novel, the Walter Scott Prize for Historical Fiction is one of the UK’s most prestigious literary prizes. The winner receives £25,000 and shortlisted authors each receive £1,500. Since it was founded fifteen years ago by the Duke and Duchess of Buccleuch, the Prize has awarded nearly £400,000 to writers and brought over 150 great novels to wider public attention.
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27 February 2024
Wiz Wharton and Tom Crewe longlisted for the Authors’ Club Best First Novel Award 2024
Tom Crewe's The New Life (Vintage) and Wiz Wharton's Ghost Girl, Banana (Hodder & Stoughton) are among those longlisted for the Authors’ Club Best First Novel Award, now in its 70th year.
The shortlist will be announced on 25th March with an event for shortlisted writers at the National Liberal Club in London on 24th April. The winner will be announced at a dinner at the National Liberal Club on 22nd May. Inaugurated in 1954, the Authors’ Club Best First Novel Award is now in its 70th year, making it the longest-running UK prize for debut fiction and – except for the James Tait Black and the Hawthornden – the oldest literary prize in Britain.
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27 February 2024
Tom Crewe and Noreen Masud shortlisted for Young Writer of the Year Award 2024
Tom Crewe and Noreen Masud have been shortlisted for Young Writer of the Year Award 2024. Tom Crewe is in the running for his debut about "19th-Century forbidden desire", The New Life (Vintage), which won the 2023 Orwell Prize for Political Fiction and the South Bank Sky Arts Award for Literature, and was shortlisted for the Polari First Book Prize. Noreen Masud is competing for the award with her "raw and radical" autobiography, A Flat Place (Hamish Hamilton), which is also longlisted for the Women’s Prize for Non-Fiction 2024.
The Charlotte Aitken Trust has increased the prize sum to £10,000. Each shortlistee also receives £1,000. The winner will be announced in a ceremony at Canova Hall in Brixton, London, on 19th March 2024.
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15 February 2024
Cat Bohannon and Noreen Masud longlisted for Women's Prize for Non-Fiction 2024
Sixteen women – including Cat Bohannon and Noreen Masud – are in the running for the inaugral Women's Prize for Non-Fiction, launched to redress the relatively low numbers of women recognised in nonfiction prizes. Cat Bohannon is longlisted for Eve (Hutchinson Heinemann) and Noreen Masud for her debut A Flat Place (Hamish Hamilton).
The launch of the nonfiction prize came in the wake of research commissioned by the Women’s prize that found that only 35% of books awarded a nonfiction prize over the past 10 years were written by women, across seven UK nonfiction prizes. The Prize will be awarded annually and is open to all women writers from across the globe who are published in the UK and writing in English. The winner receives a cheque for £30,000 and a limited-edition artwork known as the ‘Charlotte’, both gifted by the Charlotte Aitken Trust.
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