Davina Bell | |
---|---|
Born | Perth, Western Australia |
Alma mater | RMIT University |
Notable works | The End of the World Is Bigger than Love |
Notable awards |
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Davina Bell is an Australian literary editor and children's writer. Her 2020 book, The End of the World Is Bigger than Love, won a New South Wales Premier's Literary Award in 2021.
Bell was born in Perth, Western Australia. She graduated in law at university there, but then enrolled in Professional Writing and Editing at RMIT University in Melbourne. [1]
With two others, Bell co-founded the literary journal Harvest and published its first edition in 2008. [2]
She was children's editor at Penguin, where she worked on their list with authors including Mem Fox and Margaret Wild. [3] She subsequently moved Affirm Press to edit their children's list of writers including Alison Lester and Jane Godwin [4] and then to Allen & Unwin where she work on their children and young-adult list. [1]
Bell wrote a series of four books set in 1918 about a West Australian girl called Alice, who wanted to be a dancer. [5] The stories part of Penguin's Our Australian Girl series [6] and were republished in 2014 as The Alice stories. [7]
Her next book, The Underwater Fancy-Dress Parade, won the 2016 Australian Book Industry Awards Small Publishers' children's book of the year, [8] as well as two book design awards for its illustrator/designer Allison Colpoys. [9]
Her 2018 book, All the Ways to be Smart, won the Children's picture book of the year at the 2019 Australian Book Industry Awards. [10]
At the 2021 New South Wales Premier's Literary Awards she won the Ethel Turner Prize for Young People's Literature for The End of the World Is Bigger than Love. [11] She also won the 2021 CBCA Book of the Year for older readers for the same book. [12]
As of 2022 [update] five of her books have been named Notable Books at the CBCA Book of the Year Awards and her works have been shortlisted for many other Australian literary awards. [1]
Robert Duncan Drewe is an Australian novelist, non-fiction and short story writer.
Tohby Riddle is an Australian artist and writer/illustrator of picture books and illustrated books that have been published in many countries, and translated into many languages, around the world. His work has been translated by Haruki Murakami and he has been nominated for the 2022 Hans Christian Andersen Medal.
Ursula Dubosarsky is an Australian writer of fiction and non-fiction for children and young adults, whose work is characterised by a child's vision and comic voice of both clarity and ambiguity. She has won nine national literary prizes, including five New South Wales Premier's Literary Awards, more than any other writer in the Awards' 30-year history. She was appointed the Australian Children's Laureate for 2020–2021.
Margaret Wild is an Australian children's writer. She has written more than 40 books for children. Her work has been published around the world and has won several awards. She was awarded the Lifetime Achievement Award by the Children's Book Council of Australia in 2022.
The CBCA Award for New Illustrator is one of several awards presented annually by the Children's Book Council of Australia (CBCA).
The Children's Book Council of Australia (CBCA) is a not for profit organisation which aims to engage the community with literature for young Australians. The CBCA presents the annual Children's Book of the Year Awards to books of literary merit, recognising their contribution to Australian children's literature.
The Children's Book of the Year Award: Eve Pownall Award for Information Books was first presented in 1988, when the award was financed by Eve Pownall's family. Since 1993 it has been awarded annually by the Children's Book Council of Australia (CBCA).
The Children's Book of the Year Award: Picture Book has been presented occasionally since 1955 by the Children's Book Council of Australia (CBCA).
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The Australian Book Industry Awards (ABIA) are publishers' and literary awards held by the Australian Publishers Association annually in Sydney "to celebrate the achievements of authors and publishers in bringing Australian books to readers". Works are first selected by an academy of more than 200 industry professionals, and then a shortlist and winners are chosen by judging panels.
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