Press release -
H IS FOR HAWK BY HELEN MACDONALD NAMED 2014 COSTA BOOK OF THE YEAR
London, 20.30pm 27th January 2015: H is for Hawk bywriter, poet and historian Helen Macdonald has beaten bookies’ favourite, How to be both by Ali Smith, to win the title of 2014 Costa Book of the Year. H is for Hawk, part memoir and part nature book, is the author’s personal account of training a goshawk as a way of dealing with grief following her father’s death.
The announcement was made this evening (Tuesday 27th January) at an awards ceremony held at Quaglino’s in central London.
The 2014 Costa Short Story Award, judged separately from the main prize, was won by writer Zoe Gilbert.
Macdonald beat novelist and bookmakers’ favourite, Ali Smith, for How to be both, debutwriter Emma Healey for Elizabeth is Missing, poet Jonathan Edwards for My Family and Other Superheroes and author and journalist, Kate Saunders, for Five Children on the Western Front, to win the overall prize and a cheque for £30,000 at the awards ceremony.
Following the judging, Robert Harris, chair of the final judges, said: “All of the judges felt passionately about this book and its wonderful, muscular, chiselled prose.”
He continued, “This is a clever, accomplished piece of writing that everyone will enjoy. It melds a memoir about grief, a biography of TH White and is a wonderful evocation of nature and training a hawk. It’s unique, unforgettable, haunting and a natural book to win this prize.”
Harris chaired a final judging panel that included actresses Dame Diana Rigg and Samantha Bond, BBC Economics Editor Robert Peston, authors Maggie O’Farrell, Bernardine Evaristo and Jonathan Stroud, writer and poet Owen Sheers and author and journalist Wendy Moore.
H is for Hawk, published by Jonathan Cape, is the sixth biography to take the overall prize and the first in ten years. Hilary Spurling was the last author to win the Book of the Year with a biography in 2005 for Matisse: the Master.
The book most recently won the Samuel Johnson Prize for Non-Fiction in November 2014 and was the first memoir to do so in its 16-year history.
The Costa Book Awards is the only major UK book prize that is open solely to authors resident in the UK and Ireland and also, uniquely, recognises the most enjoyable books across five categories – First Novel, Novel, Biography, Poetry and Children’s Book - published in the last year.
Originally established in 1971 by Whitbread Plc, Costa announced its takeover of the sponsorship of the UK's most prestigious book prize in 2006. 2014 marks the 43rd year of the Book Awards.
Since the introduction of the Book of the Year award in 1985, it has been won eleven times by a novel, six times by a first novel, six times by a biography, five times by a collection of poetry and once by a children’s book.
The Shock of the Fall by debut novelist and mental health nurse Nathan Filer was named Costa Book of the Year in 2013.
Zoe Gilbert wins 2014 Costa Short Story Award
The Costa Book Awards ceremony also saw the announcement of the winner of the Costa Short Story Award. Writer Zoe Gilbert from Sydenham Hill, south-east London won the public vote to win £3,500 for her story, Fishskin, Hareskin. Two runners-up, part-time dentist and writer Paula Cunningham and writer Joanne Meek, received £1,500 and £500 respectively.
Established in 2012, the new Award - run in association with the Costa Book Awards but judged independently of the main five-category system – is unique in that it was judged anonymously (ie without the name of the author being known throughout the process). It is for a single, previously unpublished short story of up to 4,000 words written in English by an author aged 18 years or over, and is open to both published and unpublished writers.
A shortlist of six stories was selected by a panel of judges - Victoria Hislop, Patrick Gale, Richard Beard, Fanny Blake and Simon Trewin - and then made available on the Costa Book Awards website for the public to download and vote for their favourite. Costa Managing Director, Christopher Rogers, announced the winner and runners-up and presented them with their cheques.
For more information please visit www.costabookawards.com.
- Ends -
For further press information or to arrange an interview with Helen Macdonald, please contact:
Amanda Johnson
Costa Book Awards Press and Publicity
Telephone: 07715 922 180
Email: amanda@amandajohnsonpr.com
or
Ruth Waldram
Jonathan Cape
Email: rwaldram@randomhouse.co.uk
Telephone: 0207 840 8616
Notes for Editors:
About the Costa Book Awards:
The Costa Book Awards, formerly the Whitbread Book Awards, were established in 1971 to encourage, promote and celebrate the best contemporary British writing.
The total prize fund for the Costa Book Awards – including the Costa Short Story Award - stands at £60,000.
The award winners from the five categories - Novel, First Novel, Biography, Poetry and Children’s Book - each receive £5,000.
The overall Costa Book of the Year is selected from the five category Award winners with the winner receiving a further £30,000.
The winner will be announced at an awards ceremony in central London on 27th January, 2015.
To be eligible for the 2014 awards, books must have been first published in the UK or Ireland between 1 November 2013 and 31 October 2014.
The 2013 Costa Book of the Year was The Shock of the Fall by Nathan Filer(Borough Press).
About the Costa Short Story Award:
The Costa Short Story Award was launched in 2012.
The Costa Short Story Award is for a single, previously unpublished short story of up to 4,000 words by an author aged 18 years or over and written in English.
The author’s primary residence must have been the UK or Ireland for the past three years.
The Award runs in association with the Costa Book Awards but is judged independently of the main five-category system.
Entrants need not have been previously published but publishers and agents may submit entries on behalf of authors.
The winner of the 2013 Costa Short Story Award was The Keeper of the Jackalopes by Angela Readman.
Further Background
H is for Hawkby Helen Macdonald
Jonathan Cape
About the book:
From the age of seven, Helen Macdonald was determined to become a falconer. She learned the arcane terminology and read all the classic books, including TH White’s tortured masterpiece, The Goshawk, which describes White’s struggle to train a hawk as a spiritual contest. When her father dies and she is knocked sideways by grief, she becomes obsessed with the idea of training her own goshawk. She buys Mabel for £800 on a Scottish quayside and takes her home to Cambridge. Then she fills the freezer with hawk food and unplugs the phone, ready to embark on the long, strange business of trying to train this wildest of animals.
About the author:
Helen Macdonald is a writer, poet, illustrator, historian and affiliate at the Department of History and Philosophy of Science at the University of Cambridge. Her books include Falcon (2006) and Shaler’s Fish (2001). H is for Hawk won the 2014 Samuel Johnson Prize for Non-Fiction.
What the judges said:
“A unique and beautiful book with a searing emotional honesty, and descriptive language that is unparalleled in modern literature.”
Judges:
Paul Laity Non-Fiction Books Editor, The Guardian
Wendy Moore Author and Freelance Journalist
Sheila O’Reilly Owner, Dulwich Books
Shortlist, selected from a total of 111 entries:
John Campbell | Roy Jenkins: A Well-Rounded Life | Jonathan Cape |
Marion Coutts | The Iceberg: A Memoir | Atlantic Books |
Henry Marsh | Do No Harm: Stories of Life, Death and Brain Surgery | Weidenfeld and Nicolson |
Lucy Hughes-Hallett | The Pike | 2013 |
Mary and Bryan Talbot | The Dotter of Her Father’s Eyes | 2012 |
Matthew Hollis | Now All Roads Lead to France: The Last Year’s of Edward Thomas | 2011 |
Edmund de Waal | The Hare with Amber Eyes | 2010 |
Graham Farmelo | The Strangest Man | 2009 |
Diana Athill | Somewhere Towards the End | 2008 |
Simon Sebag Montefiore | Young Stalin | 2007 |
Brian Thompson | Keeping Mum | 2006 |
Hilary Spurling | Matisse: the Master | 2005 |
John Guy | My Heart is My Own: The Life of Mary Queen of Scots | 2004 |
DJ Taylor | Orwell: The Life | 2003 |
2013 | The Shock of the Fall | Nathan Filer | First Novel |
2012 | Bring Up the Bodies | Hilary Mantel | Novel |
2011 | Pure | Andrew Miller | Novel |
2010 | Of Mutability | Jo Shapcott | Poetry |
2009 | A Scattering | Christopher Reid | Poetry |
2008 | The Secret Scripture | Sebastian Barry | Novel |
2007 | Day | A.L. Kennedy | Novel |
2006 | The Tenderness of Wolves | Stef Penney | First Novel |
2005 | Matisse: the Master | Hilary Spurling | Biography |
2004 | Small Island | Andrea Levy | Novel |
2003 | The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time | Mark Haddon | Novel |
2002 | Samuel Pepys:The Unequalled Self | Claire Tomalin | Biography |
2001 | The Amber Spyglass | Philip Pullman | Children’s Book |
2000 | English Passengers | Matthew Kneale | Novel |
1999 | Beowulf | Seamus Heaney | Poetry |
1998 | Birthday Letters | Ted Hughes | Poetry |
1997 | Tales from Ovid | Ted Hughes | Poetry |
1996 | The Spirit Level | Seamus Heaney | Poetry |
1995 | Behind the Scenes at the Museum | Kate Atkinson | First Novel |
1994 | Felicia's Journey | William Trevor | Novel |
1993 | Theory of War | Joan Brady | Novel |
1992 | Swing Hammer Swing! | Jeff Torrington | First Novel |
1991 | A Life of Picasso | John Richardson | Biography |
1990 | Hopeful Monsters | Nicholas Mosley | Novel |
1989 | Coleridge: Early Visions | Richard Holmes | Biography |
1988 | The Comforts of Madness | Paul Sayer | First Novel |
1987 | Under the Eye of the Clock | Christopher Nolan | Biography |
1986 | An Artist of the Floating World | Kazuo Ishiguro | Novel |
1985 | Elegies | Douglas Dunn | Poetry |
Zoe Gilbert – Winner of the Costa Short Story Award 2014 for Fishskin, Hareskin
About the story:
Ervet tries to escape her new life as a fishwife by returning to her past and its lost comforts.
About the author:
Zoe Gilbert’s short stories have appeared in anthologies and journals in the UK and internationally. Her work has won prizes from Cinnamon Press, Lightship and the British Fantasy Society amongst others, and has been nominated for a Pushcart Prize. She is currently working on her first folklore-inspired collection of stories, which will form part of her PhD on the short story at the University of Chichester. She lives in London, where she runs a writers’ critique group and co-hosts the Word Factory short story club.
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