The Costa Book Awards is one of the most prestigious and popular literary
prizes in the UK and recognises some of the most enjoyable books of the year by
writers based in the UK and Ireland.
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The Costa Book Awards is unique in many ways, not least in having five
categories: First Novel, Novel, Biography, Poetry and Children's Book. The
winner in each category receives £5,000. One of these five books is selected as
the overall winner of the Book of the Year and receives a further £25,000,
making a total prize fund of £50,000. It is the only prize which
places children's books alongside adult books in this way.
The Costa Book Awards started life in 1971 as the Whitbread Literary
Awards. From 1985 they were known as the Whitbread Book Awards until 2006,
when Costa Coffee took over ownership - the year that both Costa and the Book
Awards celebrated their 35th anniversary.
Since 1971, the awards have rewarded a wide range of excellent books and
authors across all genres. Since the introduction of the overall Book of the
Year Award in 1985, it has been won seven times by a novel, three times by a
first novel, five times by a biography, five times by a collection of poetry and
once by a children's book. Recent winners include The Curious Incident
of the Dog in the Night-Time by Mark Haddon, Behind the Scenes at the
Museum by Kate Atkinson, The Amber Spyglass by Philip Pullman,
Beowulf by Seamus Heaney, Birthday Letters by Ted Hughes,
Small Island by Andrea Levy, biographies of Pepys and Matisse by Claire
Tomalin and Hilary Spurling respectively and, most recently, Stef Penney's first
novel - The Tenderness of Wolves, and A.L. Kennedy's Day.