Category talk:Literary Awards
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Revision as of 18:49, 6 December 2007 by Anna Auguscik (Talk | contribs)
- The British and Commonwealth literary prizes can be divided up into three categories:
- the first correlate to bestseller lists presenting the most successful novels on the market (British Book Awards)
- niche prizes reward authors of texts according to gender, age or experience (awards and prizes represented by Booktrust and the Society of Authors)
- prestige prizes, which include the Costa Book Awards, the Commonwealth Writers' Prize and, the most influential, Man Booker Prize for Fiction.
- The Book People Lifetime Achievement Award
- The Richard & Judy Best Read of the Year
- Reader's Digest Author of the Year
- Amazon.co.uk Biography of the Year
- Borders Book of the Year
- WHSmith Children's Book of the Year
- BCA Crime Thriller of the Year
- Waterstone's Newcomer of the Year
- Sainsbury's Popular Fiction Award
- Tesco Sports Book of the Year
- PLAY.COM Film & TV Book of the Year
- decibel Writer of the Year
- New Writing Ventures (National prizes and awards for emerging writers in poetry, fiction and non-fiction, launched by The New Writing Partnership),
- The Kim Scott Walwyn Prize (A prize for women in publishing in Britain),
- Early Years Awards (formerly Sainsbury's Baby Book Award),
- Booktrust Teenage Prize (Recognising and celebrating contemporary teenage fiction),
- Nestlé Children's Book Prize (For the best work of fiction or poetry for children in three age categories - up to 11 years, formerly the Nestlé Smarties Book Prize),
- The Orange Broadband Prize for Fiction, (novel by a female author of any nationality, written in English and published in the UK in the preceding year, prize: £30,000, and a bronze sculpture called the "Bessie" created by artist Grizel Niven, the sister of actor/writer David Niven )
- John Llewellyn Rhys Prize (open to British and Commonwealth writers of fiction, non-fiction, poetry, and drama aged 35 or under; winner receives £5,000 and runners up £500)
- The Cholmondeley Awards (totalling £8,000 are awarded annually to honour distinguished poets),
- The Olive Cook and Tom-Gallon Awards (both prizes of £1,000 for a short story, biennially, in alternate years),
- The Encore Awards (of £10,000 for the best published second novel of the year, entry by the publisher),
- The Eric Gregory Awards (totalling £24,000 each year, awarded to British poets under the age of 30 on the basis of a submitted collection, published and unpublished collections),
- The Richard Imison Award (of £1,500 is an annual award for the best dramatic work broadcast on radio, entry by the producer),
- The Elizabeth Longford Prize for Historical Biography (of £3,000 for the best published historical biography of the year, no unsolicited submissions accepted),
- The Somerset Maugham Awards (totalling £12,000 each year are awarded to British authors under the age of 35 for a published work of fiction, non-fiction or poetry, entry by the publisher),
- The McKitterick Prize (of £4,000 is awarded for a first novel by an author over the age of 40, published and unpublished novels),
- The Betty Trask Prize and Awards (totalling £25,000 are awarded to authors under the age of 35 for a first novel, published or unpublished),
- The The Sunday Times Young Writer of the Year (of £5,000, awarded to a British author under the age of 35 for a published work of fiction, non-fiction or poetry, entry by publisher
- The Travelling Scholarships (honorary awards made annually to British writers, submissions not accepted),
- The interest of prestige prizes does not necessarily lie in selecting the best novels from a long-list pile but rather in fostering those most likely to succeed.