Hampshire Book Awards

The Hampshire Book Awards are an annual series of literary awards given to works of children's literature. The awards are run by Hampshire County Council's School Library Service.[1][2]

There are three awards: Hampshire Book Award, Hampshire Illustrated Book Award and Hampshire Picture Book Award. A fourth award, the Hampshire Information Book Award, is being piloted in 2013.

Hampshire Book Award

The Hampshire Book Award is given to works of children's literature published in paperback during the previous year. Around June every year, the final is held and selected Year 8 students from schools across Hampshire attend it in order to vote for the winning book. A celebration event for the award is held in October, and where possible, the winning author is invited to attend.

Winners and shortlists
  • 2016 Looking at the Stars by Jo Coterill
    • Winterkill by Kate A Boorman
    • Apple and Rain by Sarah Crossan
    • Devil You Know by Cathy MacPhail
    • The Boundless by Kenneth Oppel
    • Smart by Kim Slater

Hampshire Illustrated Book Award

The Hampshire Illustrated Book Award is an annual award given to illustrated works of children's literature. The award is judged by children in Year 5 and run by Hampshire County Council's School Library Service. The shortlist is announced in October each year, and the winner in December. An award ceremony is held in March the following year.

Winners and shortlists

Hampshire Picture Book Award

The Hampshire Picture Book Award is an annual award given to works of children's literature published in paperback during the previous year. The award is judged by children in Year 1 and run by Hampshire County Council's School Library Service. The shortlist is announced in January each year, and the winner announced in April. In May 2012, an award ceremony was held for the first time for the Hampshire Picture Book Award.

Winners and shortlists
  • 2012 Otto the Book Bear by Katie Cleminson
    • Angelica Sprocket's Pockets by Quentin Blake
    • Sir Laughalot by Tony Mitton and Sarah Warburton
    • Bedtime for Monsters by Ed Vere
  • 2011 This is My Book by Mick Inkpen
    • What the Ladybird Heard by Julia Donaldson and Lydia Monks
    • My mum has X-ray Vision by Angela McAllister and Alex T. Smith
    • Loon on the Moon by Chae Strathie and Emily Golden
  • 2010 Super Daisy and the Peril of Planet Pea by Kes Gray and Nick Sharratt
    • Little Boat by Thomas Docherty
    • Class Three all at Sea by Julia Jarman
    • Wolf's Magnificent Master Plan by Melanie Williamson

Hampshire Information Book Award

The Hampshire Information Book Award is being piloted in 2013. It will be awarded to a work of children's non fiction published in paperback in the previous year. The award will be judged by children in Year 4 and run by Hampshire County Council's School Library Service. Ten schools are participating in the inaugural award. The shortlist will be announced on 25 January 2013.

gollark: ARM laptops have been a thing for a while. They just weren't very popular, or good.
gollark: If nothing else, they have excellent CPU designers.
gollark: And it *is* ubiquitous in high-power platforms; Intel just messed up entry into mobile. I don't know exactly why. Possibly the lack of ability to include x86 cores in custom designs.
gollark: AMD had a terrible architecture for ages and didn't fix it until Zen.
gollark: Intel was sandbagging a lot due to low competition and also got apified by process issues.

References

  1. "Winners of Hampshire book award to be announced". Hampshire Chronicle. 17 June 2010. Retrieved September 22, 2012.
  2. Tom Tonkin (June 10, 2010). "Pupils have their say on county book awards". Get Hampshire. Archived from the original on June 13, 2010. Retrieved September 22, 2012.
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