Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Authors celebrate awards success

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Authors celebrate awards success

    Press Association Newsfile
    January 6, 2009 Tuesday 2:45 AM BST


    AUTHORS CELEBRATE AWARDS SUCCESS

    by Vicky Shaw, Press Association Arts Correspondent



    Authors Sebastian Barry, Sadie Jones, Diana Athill, Adam Foulds and
    Michelle Magorian have been named as category winners of the Costa
    Book Awards.

    Barry triumphed in the Novel Award category for The Secret Scripture
    after missing out on the Man Booker Prize for Fiction in October.

    Athill won the Biography Award for her memoir, Somewhere Towards the
    End, and at 91 is the oldest-ever category-winning author in the
    history of the awards.

    Magorian, the author of the hugely successful Goodnight Mr Tom, won
    the Children's Book Award for Just Henry, her first new book in 10
    years.

    The Costa Book Awards recognises the most enjoyable books of the last
    year by writers based in the UK and Ireland.

    The five books are now eligible for the Costa Book of the Year - and
    bookies William Hill placed Barry at 2-1 favourite to win.

    Originally established in 1971 by Whitbread, Costa took over the
    sponsorship of the prize in 2006.

    ``The Costa Book Awards have an excellent track record of recognising
    and celebrating some of the very best current British writing, and
    books that can be enjoyed by everyone,'' said John Derkach, managing
    director, Costa.

    ``We're very proud to be announcing such an outstanding collection of
    books which we know people will enjoy reading.

    ``Our final judges will have a tough time selecting just one from
    these five for the title of Costa Book of the Year - but it makes for
    a very exciting awards ceremony later this month.''

    The winners, each of whom receive £5,000, were selected from 616
    entries, the highest number ever received.

    The Costa Book of the Year will be selected by a panel of judges
    chaired by columnist and broadcaster Matthew Parris and including
    Rosamund Pike, Michael Buerk, Alexander Armstrong and Andrea
    Catherwood.

    It will be announced at an awards ceremony hosted by Mariella Frostrup
    at the Intercontinental Hotel in central London on January 27.

    Since the introduction of the Book of the Year award in 1985, it has
    been won eight times by a novel, four times by a first novel, five
    times by a biography, five times by a collection of poetry and once by
    a children's book.

    The 2007 Costa Book of the Year was won by AL Kennedy for Day.

    Here are the five successful authors who will compete for the Costa
    Book of the Year, selected by different groups of judges, and their
    books:

    Sebastian Barry triumphed in the Novel Award category for The Secret
    Scripture.

    The book centres around Roseanne McNulty, perhaps nearing her 100th
    birthday - no one is quite sure - who faces an uncertain future, as
    the Roscommon Regional Mental Hospital where she's spent the best part
    of her adult life prepares for closure.

    Over the weeks leading up to this upheaval, she talks often with her
    psychiatrist Dr Grene.

    Dublin-born playwright and novelist Barry has won many awards
    including the Christopher Ewart-Biggs Prize, the London Critics Circle
    Award and the Kerry Group Irish Fiction Prize.

    Judges said: ``This exquisitely written love story takes you on an
    unforgettable journey - you won't read a better book this year.''

    Diana Athill won the Costa Biography Award for her memoir, Somewhere
    Towards the End.

    Looking back on a life well lived and the stories, events and
    relationships that have peppered it, Athill offers reflections on the
    lessons she has learned - lessons that it is said will strike a
    universal chord with readers in any stage of life.

    She writes with intimate honesty about friendship, love, sex, and sore
    feet.

    Athill worked for the BBC throughout the Second World War and helped
    establish the publishing company Andre Deutsch.

    She has written five volumes of memoir including the acclaimed Stet,
    and one novel. She lives in London.

    The judges described the work as: ``A perfect memoir of old age -
    candid, detailed, charming, totally lacking in self-pity or
    sentimentality and above all, beautifully, beautifully written.''

    Sadie Jones wins the First Novel Award for The Outcast.

    The book, set in 1957, centres around Lewis Aldridge travelling back
    to his home in the South of England. He is straight out of jail and 19
    years old.

    His return will trigger the implosion not just of his family, but of a
    whole community.

    Jones was born in London and grew up in a creative environment. Her
    father is the Jamaican poet Evan Jones.

    The Outcast was shortlisted for the 2008 Orange Prize, selected as a
    Richard & Judy Summer Read, has been serialised on Radio 4's Book at
    Bedtime and won the Good Housekeeping Best Debut Award. Jones is
    married to the architect Tim Boyd, has two children and is currently
    working on her second novel.

    The judges said: ``This book's portrayal of pain makes it a riveting
    and heartbreaking read - it's rare for a first novel to be this
    assured.''

    Michelle Magorian wins the Children's Book Award for Just Henry.

    Set in post-war Britain, Just Henry is the story of a young boy who
    escapes the bleakness of life through his passion for cinema.

    His stepfather, whom he despises, will never compare with his dead
    father, a war hero.

    Magorian was born in Southsea, Portsmouth, of a Welsh mother and Irish
    father with an Armenian surname, and began writing regularly while
    studying at the Rose Bruford College of Speech and Drama in Kent.

    Having studied mime with Marcel Marceau, she went on to work in
    theatre, television and film, and toured her one-woman mime show in
    Italy and England.

    Her first novel, Goodnight Mister Tom, won numerous awards and has
    sold more than 1.2 million copies in the UK alone.

    The judges said: ``This is a master storyteller at work with the sort
    of descriptive writing that is a joy to read.

    ``Just Henry is a soaring, uplifting warm bath of a book - a wonderful
    roller-coaster of a story which we all absolutely loved.''

    Adam Foulds wins the Poetry Award for The Broken Word.

    The Broken Word is a ``delicate and powerful'' poetic sequence that
    charts a young man's progress through a dark period in British
    colonial history - the Mau Mau uprisings in Kenya.

    Foulds lives in South London and is a graduate of the Creative Writing
    MA at the University of East Anglia. His poetry has appeared in a
    number of literary magazines.

    He wrote his first novel, The Truth About These Strange Times, while
    working as a forklift truck driver in a warehouse.

    He went on to win The Sunday Times Young Writer of The Year Award in
    April 2008. The Broken Word is Foulds's first work of poetry.

    The judges said: ``It is a rare achievement to write a poetry book
    that the reader simply can't put down.

    ``Readers of poetry and fiction alike will be swept along by its
    chilling narrative.''
Working...
X