Award winning debut novelist seeks to champion independent bookshops as Booktrust online writer in residence

The 2009 John Llewellyn Rhys Prize winning author Evie Wyld has today been announced as Booktrust’s third online writer in residence. The 29-year-old won the prestigious prize with her debut novel set in Australia, After the Fire, A Still Small Voice, which has since been shortlisted for the 2010 Authors Club First Novel Award and the Commonwealth Writers Prize.

Click here to read more about Evie's residency

The Sunday Times EFG Short Story Competition shortlist is announced

The shortlist for The Sunday Times EFG Private Bank Short Story Award was announced on Sunday 7 March 2010. Six writers are competing for the £25,000 prize for a single short story. The winner will be announced on 26 March 2010.

Click here to see the full shortlist

Blue Peter Book Award 2010 Winners Announced

A thrilling adventure of two cryogenically frozen children from the 1950s, brought back to life in 2009 has been crowned the Blue Peter Book of the Year at this year’s Blue Peter Book Awards.

The author Ali Sparkes, who previously worked as a Bluecoat in Pontins, a sequined assistant to a juggling unicyclist and a comedy columnist for Radio 4’s Home Truths, was announced as the winner of the Blue Peter Book of the Year Award 2010 with her book Frozen in Time.

The book saw off intense competition from celebrated authors including the award-winning Frank Cottrell Boyce.

Frozen in Time won the ultimate accolade on the special episode of Blue Peter broadcast 3 March on BBC One in honour of World Book Day.  

Click here to download the press release

The longlist for The Sunday Times EFG Private Bank Short Story Award is announced

The longlist for The Sunday Times EFG Private Bank Short Story Award was announced on Sunday 21 February. Twenty writers - seven women and thirteen men - are competing for the £25,000 prize for a single short story. 

Click here to read about the longlist

A new generation of 'silver scribblers'

A survey of more than 1,100 people aged 60 and over in the UK, has revealed a generation of ‘silver scribblers’ keen to use their growing familiarity with the internet to publish their own creative writing, join book groups and research their family history and stories.

Independent research was conducted with 1,162 people aged 60 and over across the UK on behalf of Bookbite, a reading and creative writing project for the over 60s run by the reading charity Booktrust. 

Click here to read more about the survey

The reading project lifeline for children in care

Results published today by the reading charity Booktrust and the University of Leicester have revealed the phenomenal effect of a reading project on the literacy and mathematical abilities of children in care.

Results published today (Monday 26 January 2010) reveal the profound impact of the project on number and reading skills of the 1,000 children participating. Test results for 449 children were submitted.

Click here to read more about the findings

Booktrust launches its first reading and writing project for the over 60s

The independent reading charity Booktrust is launching its first project which aims to encourage over 60s to engage in reading and creative writing.

The project, entitled Bookbite, aims to inspire people aged 60 and over in England to take up reading and writing to experience the positive affects that they can offer for emotional health and wellbeing.

Bookbite also aims to encourage over 60s to explore the benefits of getting online by working closely with the thousands of UK Online centres across the country to access and explore the Bookbite website.

Click here to read more about the project

Short story novice clinches the BBC National Short Story Award

An award-winning poet has won the prestigious BBC National Short Story Award with her second attempt at a short story.

Kate Clanchy, who has worked primarily as a teacher and as Poet in Residence for the Red Cross, beat an exceptional shortlist which included past Orange Prize winners Lionel Shriver and Naomi Alderman, and BAFTA-nominated author Jane Rogers.

Click here to read more

Bookseller's first novel wins the JLR 2009

29-year-old Evie Wyld saw off competition from an exceptional shortlist which included the Booker winner Aravind Adiga and Orange Prize winner Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie with her book After the Fire, a Still Small Voice.

Click here to read more

All-women shortlist for the BBC National Short Story Award

This year’s BBC’s National Short Story Award will be an all female affair after the shortlist revealed that, for the first time, only women are in the running to win the award.

The award, which celebrates the best of the contemporary British short story, is one of the most prestigious for a single short story with the winning author receiving £15,000; the runner up £3,000 and three further authors £500 each.

Click here to read more about the shortlist

Booktrust is now taking bookings for the following conferences next year

Booktrust Conferences 2010
Reading for Pleasure, Reading for Life

Wednesday 20 January 2010

The Belmont Hotel, De Montfort Street, Leicester, LE1 7GR

Wednesday 27 January 2010

Armada House, Telephone Avenue, Bristol, BS1 4BQ

Wednesday 3 February 2010

The Lowry, Pier 8, Salford Quays, Manchester, M50 3AZ

This conference will demonstrate the ways in which making Bookstart, Booktime, Booked Up and Letterbox Club a core part of your offer will support you and your Local Authority in inspiring a love of books for all.

Click here to download the conference flyer with booking form

Northern Ireland Booktrust Conference

The Gift of Books: inspiring a lifelong love of reading

Monday 22 February 2010

10am – 4pm followed by networking reception until 5pm

Dunsilly Hotel, 20 Dunsilly Road, Antrim BT41 2JH

This one day conference will present Booktrust’s bookgifting programmes and activities as offered across Northern Ireland. The focus will be on best practice and ways to build on Booktrust’s work with partners to ensure targeted provision and better access for all.  

Click here to download the conference flyer with booking form

Neil Gaiman’s The Graveyard Book wins the Booktrust Teenage Prize 2009

Neil Gaiman, commonly known as the ‘rock star’ of the literary world, is revealed as the winner of the Booktrust Teenage Prize 2009.

His book The Graveyard Book saw off competition from five other authors including Patrick Ness who was nominated for a second year. Ness won the prize last year with The Knife of Never Letting Go.

The Graveyard Book tells the story of Nobody ‘Bod’ Owens, a child abandoned in a graveyard after the vicious murder of his parents and sister by The Man Jack. Raised and educated by the ghosts that live there, Bod encounters terrible and unexpected menaces in the horror of the pit of the Sleer and the city of Ghouls. It is in the land of the living that the real danger lies as The Man Jack is determined to find Bod and finish him off.

Neil Gaiman is listed as one of the top ten living post-modern writers, and is a prolific creator of works of prose, poetry, film, journalism, comics, song lyrics, and drama. He is the creator of the iconic DC comic series Sandman, the only comic to ever make the New York Times Bestseller list.

Click here to read more about the Teenage Prize 2009

Perform-a-Poem is a brand new website for sharing children’s poetry performances

Launched this week at a reception at the National Theatre, this unique poetry performance website for primary school children encourages children to write, choose, perform, film and edit poems. It's a secure site for teachers and pupils who enjoy performing and watching performance poetry, developed in line with national standards on e-safety and child protection.

Perform-a-Poem, initially piloting for London schools, is a joint project between Michael Rosen, Booktrust and the London Grid for Learning (LGfL). It developed from an idea by Michael Rosen during his highly successful term as Children’s Laureate (2007-9): 'I’m hoping that Perform-a-Poem will give an opportunity for children and teachers to experiment and play with poetry in an exciting way. All poems have a voice; sometimes this voice is best heard silently, but most poems enjoy being spoken and performed, because this is how we get to feel a poem.'

As well as the video upload and browse features, Perform-a-Poem contains comprehensive resources for teachers to help their pupils write, choose, perform, film, edit and upload their poems.

Click here to visit Perform-a-Poem

Shortlist revealed for the CBBC’s Blue Peter Book Awards 2010

Booktrust and Blue Peter are delighted to announce the shortlist for the Blue Peter Book Awards 2010. These enormously popular and influential awards have been recognising and celebrating the best children’s authors, the most creative illustrators and the greatest reads for children since 2000.

Read about the shortlist in full

Global concerns for an international John Llewellyn Rhys shortlist

The shortlist is announced today for the John Llewellyn Rhys Prize, which celebrates the best work of literature (fiction, non-fiction, poetry or drama) by a UK or Commonwealth writer aged 35 or under.

This year welcomes a truly international shortlist with writers from Nigeria, India, Canada Australia and the UK vying for this year’s award, which is the second oldest literary award in the UK. The 2009 shortlist comprises two works of non-fiction, a debut poetry collection, a collection of short stories and two novels.

Read about the shortlist in full

New research into children's reading habits

A survey of over 3,000 parents, carers and children in the UK commissioned for Booktime and Booked Up has found that the love of reading is growing among children.

However, the research, which was published on 20 October 2009, also showed that 3% of parents and carers never or rarely read with their children. For those who do, just one in three read with their children on a daily basis.

Read the research results in full

Friday 16 October is Everybody Writes Day!

Everybody Writes Day is an annual celebration of writing in schools where primary and secondary schools collapse the curriculum for one whole day to celebrate writing in all its forms.

On 15 October, Tidemill Primary School in Birmingham held an Everybody Writes day focused on their move from one school building to a newly built site.

On 16 October, children at Colemore Infants and Nursery School in Birmingham are enjoying a Diwali-themed Everybody Writes Day: writing on light boxes and lotus flowers and getting parents involved in their activities.

Visit the Everybody Writes website for writing games, inspiring projects and videos, all aimed at helping teachers create engaging and inspiring writing projects for their children.

The nation's favourite nursery rhyme is revealed!

The theme of this year’s National Bookstart Day, which takes place on Friday 9 October, is My Favourite Rhyme.

A survey of more than 2,500 people, conducted especially for Bookstart, has revealed that Twinkle Twinkle Little Star is the nation's favourite nursery rhyme.

But the survey also shows that the UK is falling out of love with nursery rhymes, with parents claiming that they are simply too old-fashioned to interest their children.

Read about the survey

Find out more about National Bookstart Day

Children's Book Week

Children’s Book Week is a celebration of reading for pleasure for children of primary school age.

Children’s Book Week 2009 takes place from 5-11 October; the theme is Words and Pictures.

Find out more about Children's Book Week

The second Booktrust: Power of Reading Award

Booktrust is proud to be sponsoring the Booktrust: Power of Reading Award for the second year running. The Award is one of the Adult Learners' Week Awards.

Find out how to nominate

New EU READ website

For the next two years Booktrust will be chairing EU READ, a consortium of European reading promotion organisations. We have just redesigned the website.

Visit the EU READ website

Early Years Awards winners announced

At a packed ceremony at BAFTA, Piccadilly, in London, the winners of the Booktrust Early Years Awards were announced. Mara Bergman, Nick Maland, Ed Vere and Katie Cleminson received their trophies from Chair of judges Wendly Cooling MBE.

Find out more about the Early Years Awards winners and read interviews with Katie Cleminson and Ed Vere

Booktrust Teenage Prize shortlist announced

The shortlist for the 2009 prize was announced on 21 September.

Read about the shortlisted titles

DCSF funding secured

DCSF confirms £27 million to fund Booktrust's free-book programmes.

Read Viv Bird's message about the DCSF funding

The Sunday Times EFG Private Bank Short Story Award is announced

The Sunday Times is pleased to announce a prestigious new annual literary prize: The Sunday Times EFG Private Bank Short Story Award. The winner will receive £25,000, making it the largest prize for an individual short story in the world.

Read more about the Sunday Times EFG Award

Our second online writer in residence is announced

Author and poet Nii Parkes is Booktrust's second online writer in residence.

Read about Nii Parkes

Results of Booktrust's summer reading round-up revealed

Booktrust's seasonal round-up of the newspaper critics' summer reading recommendations has revealed that the most popular title for the beach this year is Sarah Waters' chilling novel The Little Sranger (Virago), with Hilary Mantel's Wolf Hall not far behind.

In non-fiction, Antony Beevor's D-Day (Viking) and Gillian Tett's Fool's Gold (Little, Brown) were heralded.

Find out more about the summer reading round-up

Exclusive new story by Patrick Ness

Booktrust's first-ever online writer in residence has written a new story exclusively for the Booktrust website. A sort of prequel to The Knife of Never Letting Go, 'The New World' explains how Viola ended up on Todd's home planet. It also tells us more about Viola's relationship with her parents.

Read 'The New World' now

Anthony Browne is the new Children's Laureate

Anthony Browne, internationally acclaimed award-winning author and illustrator was announced as the Children’s Laureate for 2009-11 at a ceremony at Centre Point, London, on 9 June.

Accepting his medal from Andrew Motion, chair of the selection panel, Anthony said:

'It's an honour to be the Children's Laureate for 2009-11. I'm well aware of the amazing things achieved by the five previous Laureates, and I'm in awe of their commitment and hard work.'

Visit the Children's Laureate website to find out more

Booktime and Booked Up 2009 launch

In the UK’s biggest annual free book giveaway for schools, Booktrust will be delivering more than 2 million free books to pupils in reception and Year 7 by Christmas, through their Booktime and Booked Up programmes.

The Booktime programme for reception-aged pupils (4-5 years old) and Booked Up programme for Year 7 pupils (aged 11-12) both encourage reading for pleasure. The programmes continue to be supported in England by the DCSF (Department for Children, Schools and Families). Both programmes are free to all participating schools.

Read the press release (Microsoft Word .doc 308Kb)

Visit the Booktime website

Visit the Booked Up website

2009 Orange Prize winners announced

The winners of the 2009 Orange Prize for Fiction and the 2009 Orange Award for New Writers were announced on 3 June at a ceremony in the Royal Festival Hall, London.

Marilynne Robinson won the Orange Prize for Fiction for Home (Virago) and Francesca Kay won the Orange Award for New Writers for An Equal Stillness (Weidenfeld & Nicolson).

Booktrust has administered the prize since its inception 14 years ago.

Visit the Orange Prize website

Booktrust launches Bedtime Reading Week

Booktrust is pleased to announce its support for this year’s National Family Week with their Bedtime Reading Week. The week will run from Wednesday 27 May to Wednesday 2 June.

National Family Week, which runs from 25–31 May 2009, is a new occasion to celebrate family life in the UK.

Bedtime Reading Week will encourage all the family to get involved in the sheer joy and pleasure of reading aloud.

To support the week, Booktrust has provided specially designed website pages providing tips and ideas on sharing stories and rhymes; advice on how to organise a Bedtime Reading Week event; recommended books to read aloud; downloadable Bedtime Reading posters and resources; games, songs and rhymes to enjoy at bedtime; advice for parents of children who are starting to read and for those who are already independent readers; and information about events at libraries, children’s centres, health clinics and schools where you can get together with other families to celebrate reading.

Visit our Bedtime Reading Week web pages

Choosing books to go in our bookgifting packs

Booktrust brings together independent panels of experts to select books for inclusion in the Booktrust national bookgifting programmes, Bookstart, Booktime and Booked Up.

Senior book consultant Wendy Cooling liaises with publishers and chairs the selection panels.

Find out more about our bookgifting packs