Rubery Book Award | |
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Awarded for | Best self published or indie book written in the English language. |
Website | www |
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]
In 2012, the award attracted submissions from five continents. [4] In 2015 entries were received from twenty different countries around the world: Australia, Canada, China, Finland, Germany, Ghana, Greece, Ireland, Israel, Japan, New Zealand, Nigeria, Norway, Portugal, Saudi Arabia, Spain, Sweden, Switzerland, UK, and USA.
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.
Year | Author | Title | Category |
---|---|---|---|
2011 | Sarah James | Into the Yell | Poetry |
2011 | Lindsay Stanberry–Flynn | Unravelling | Fiction |
2011 Winner | Christine Donovan | Jump Derry, [7] | Fiction |
2012 | Carol Mead and Gareth Davies | Sea Things | Children's Poetry |
2012 | Ann Victoria Roberts | The Master's Tale | Fiction |
2012 Winner | Daniela Murphy | The Restorer | Fiction |
2013 | Sophie Neville | Funnily Enough | Non-Fiction |
2013 | T. D. Griggs | Redemption Blues | Fiction |
2013 Winner | Jacob M. Appel | The Man Who Wouldn't Stand Up | Fiction |
2014 | Peter Reason | Spindrift | Non-Fiction |
2014 | JoeAnn Hart | Float | Fiction |
2014 Winner | Victor Tapner | Flatlands [8] | Poetry |
2015 | Diana Kimpton | The Green Sheep | Children's |
2015 | Jo Riccion | The Italians at Cleat's Corner Store | Fiction |
2015 | Sasha Harding | A Brush with the Coast | Non Fiction |
2015 | Diana Whitney | Wanting It | Poetry |
Book of the Year 2015 | Angela Readman | Don't Try this at Home | Short Stories |
2016 | Lisa Woollett | Sea Journal | Non Fiction |
2016 | Annie Dawid | York Ferry | Fiction |
2016 | Emma Purshouse and Catherine Pascall Moore | I Once Knew a Poem Who Wore a Hat | Children's Poetry |
Book of the Year 2016 | Laura Tisdall | Echoes | YA |
2017 | Lena Adishian and Nareg Seferian | Impact of an Ancient Nation | Non Fiction |
2017 | Melanie Whipman | Llama Sutra | Short stories |
2017 | Debbie Wise | Rosie and Rufus | Children's |
2017 | John Toomey | Slipping | Fiction |
Book of the Year 2017 | Jaq Hazell | My Life as a Bench | YA |
2018 | Keith Chandler | The Goldsmith's Apprentice | Poetry |
2018 | Jenny Morris; illustrated by Sara Hayat | The Thing on Mount Spring | Illustrated Children's |
2018 | R. K. Salters | Butterfly Ranch | Fiction |
2018 | Wendy Storer | Bring Me Sunshine | YA |
Book of the Year 2018 | David P Miraldi | The Edge of Innocence | Non Fiction |
2019 | Jacob M Appel | Amazing Thins are Happening Here | Short Stories |
2019 | Chad Alan Gibbs | Two Like Me and You | YA |
2019 | Oz Hardwick | Learning to Have Lost | Poetry |
2019 | Lisa Anne Novelline; Nicola Hwang | Piccadilly and the Jolly Raindrops | Children's |
Book of the Year 2019 | Claire Chao and Isabel Sun Chao | Remembering Shanghai | Non Fiction |
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