Winifred Holtby Memorial Prize
The Winifred Holtby Memorial Prize was presented from 1967 until 2003 by the Royal Society of Literature for the best regional novel of the year.[1] It is named after the novelist Winifred Holtby who was noted for her novels set in the rural scenes of her childhood. In 2003 it was superseded by the Ondaatje Prize.
Year | Recipient | Title |
---|---|---|
2002 | Alexandra Fuller | Don't Let's Go to the Dogs Tonight |
2001 | Anna Burns | No Bones |
2000 | Donna Morrissey | Kit's Law |
1999 | Andrew O'Hagan | Our Fathers |
1998 | Giles Foden | The Last King of Scotland |
1997 | Eden Robinson | Traplines |
1996 | Rohinton Mistry | A Fine Balance |
1995 | Paul Watkins | Archangel |
1994 | Jim Crace | Signals of Distress |
1993 | Carl McDougall | The Lights Below |
1992 | Adam Thorpe | Ulverton |
1991 | Elspeth Barker | O Caledonia |
1990 | Nino Ricci | Lives of the Saints |
1989 | Hilary Mantel | Fludd |
1988 | Shusha Guppy | The Blindfold Horse |
1986 | Maggie Hemingway | The Bridge |
1984 | Balraj Khanna | A Nation of Fools |
1983 | Graham Swift | Waterland |
1982 | Kazuo Ishiguro | A Pale View of Hills |
1981 | Alan Judd | A Breed of Heroes |
1980 | Elsa Joubert | Poppie |
1978 | Richard Herley | The Stone Arrow |
1977 | Anita Desai | Fire on the Mountain |
1976 | Eugene McCabe | Victims |
1975 | Jane Gardam | Black Faces, White Faces |
1974 | Graham King | The Pandora Valley |
1973 | Ronald Harwood | Articles of Faith |
1973 | Peter Tinniswood | I Didn't Know You Cared |
1971 | John Stewart | Last Cool Days |
1970 | Shiva Naipaul | Fireflies |
1969 | Ian McDonald | The Humming-Bird Tree |
1968 | Catherine Cookson | The Round Tower |
1967 | David Bean | The Big Meeting |
References
- "The Winifred Holtby Memorial Prize". The Royal Society of Literature. Retrieved 2010-01-13.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.