International Rubery Book Award

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Rubery Book Award
Rubery Book Award RBA logo 2.jpg
Rubery Book Award
Awarded forBest self published or indie book written in the English language.
Website www.ruberybookaward.com

The Rubery International Book Award (founded in 2010 by Heather Painter) is the largest cash award for books published by independent publishers and self published authors in Great Britain. [1] The London Review of Books described it as "independent publishing's response to the Booktrust and the Orange Prize. [2] The Alliance of Independent Authors describes the award as: 'holders of the respected Rubery Award [...] should be considered to have a quality endorsement.' [3]

Contents

In 2012, the award attracted submissions from five continents. [4] In 2015 entries were received from twenty countries: Australia, Canada, China, Finland, Germany, Ghana, Greece, Ireland, Israel, Japan, New Zealand, Nigeria, Norway, Portugal, Saudi Arabia, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland, UK, and USA.

Judges

Current and prior judges include Booker shortlisted author Clare Morrall; publisher of Tindal Street Press Alan Mahar; judge for the international Arthur C. Clarke Award Pauline Morgan; American literature and Creative Writing lecturer, Paul McDonald; Poet and Stand winner Jeff Phelps, Gaynor Arnold who was longlisted for the Booker Prize and the Orange Prize (now the Bailey's); short story writer and novelist, Judith Allnatt; children's authors, Ann Evans and Simon Cheshire; creative writing teacher and previously Birmingham's Poet Laureate, Chris Morgan; William Gallagher, author, dramatist, and lecturer who writes Doctor Who audio dramas, stage plays, and has British journalism experience; and literary agent Laura Longrigg.

Successes

Winners

YearAuthorTitleCategory
2011 Sarah James Into the YellPoetry
2011 Lindsay Stanberry–Flynn UnravellingFiction
2011 Winner Christine Donovan Jump Derry, [7] Fiction
2012 Carol Mead and Gareth Davies Sea ThingsChildren's Poetry
2012 Ann Victoria Roberts The Master's TaleFiction
2012 Winner Daniela Murphy The RestorerFiction
2013 Sophie Neville Funnily EnoughNon-Fiction
2013 T. D. Griggs Redemption BluesFiction
2013 Winner Jacob M. Appel The Man Who Wouldn't Stand Up Fiction
2014 Peter Reason SpindriftNon-Fiction
2014 JoeAnn Hart FloatFiction
2014 Winner Victor Tapner Flatlands [8] Poetry
2015 Diana Kimpton The Green SheepChildren's
2015 Jo Riccion The Italians at Cleat's Corner StoreFiction
2015 Sasha Harding A Brush with the CoastNon Fiction
2015 Diana Whitney Wanting ItPoetry
Book of the Year 2015 Angela Readman Don't Try this at HomeShort Stories
2016 Lisa Woollett Sea JournalNon Fiction
2016 Annie Dawid York FerryFiction
2016 Emma Purshouse and Catherine Pascall Moore I Once Knew a Poem Who Wore a HatChildren's Poetry
Book of the Year 2016 Laura Tisdall EchoesYA
2017Lena Adishian and Nareg Seferian Impact of an Ancient NationNon Fiction
2017Melanie WhipmanLlama SutraShort stories
2017 Debbie Wise Rosie and RufusChildren's
2017 John Toomey SlippingFiction
Book of the Year 2017 Jaq Hazell My Life as a BenchYA
2018Keith ChandlerThe Goldsmith's ApprenticePoetry
2018Jenny Morris; illustrated by Sara HayatThe Thing on Mount SpringIllustrated Children's
2018R. K. SaltersButterfly RanchFiction
2018Wendy StorerBring Me SunshineYA
Book of the Year 2018David P MiraldiThe Edge of InnocenceNon Fiction
2019Jacob M AppelAmazing Thins are Happening HereShort Stories
2019Chad Alan GibbsTwo Like Me and YouYA
2019Oz HardwickLearning to Have LostPoetry
2019 Lisa Anne Novelline; Nicola HwangPiccadilly and the Jolly RaindropsChildren's
Book of the Year 2019Claire Chao and Isabel Sun ChaoRemembering ShanghaiNon Fiction

Short Story Winners

References

  1. Birmingham Post, August 1, 2011
  2. London Review of Books, Sept 2012
  3. "Open up to Indie Authors Campaign".
  4. Birmingham Mail, July 22, 2012
  5. "Celebrating Angela Readman's 2016 Edge Hill Short Story Prize shortlisting « and Other Stories Publishing". Archived from the original on 23 March 2017. Retrieved 22 March 2017.
  6. [ dead link ]
  7. Downey, Garbhan. "Jump Derry". Culture Northern Ireland. Culture Northern Ireland. Archived from the original on 14 October 2021. Retrieved 23 February 2015.
  8. "East Anglian poetry collection wins international book award". East Anglian Daily Times. Archived from the original on 16 August 2018. Retrieved 10 October 2020.