I’m amazed that it must be some six years since I have been able to attend the presentation of the Guardian Children’s Fiction Prize, but it has to be that long because last Thursday was my first visit to the ‘new’ Guardian offices beside the Regents Canal.
What a splendid area of London this is becoming!
Writers have always coveted this prize because the judging panel is made up of fellow authors – this year Frank Cottrell Boyce, Gillian Cross and Katherine Rundell.
Since moving to the new offices the occasion has become much more party-like, especially so since the Children’s Books section of the website has become heavily involved in promoting both the longlist and shortlist, and in running the Young Critics competition. Indeed, a presentation to the winning Young Critics preceded the announcement of the main prize.
This year the shortlist of four books included two by UK authors and two by Americans. When I looked around the gathering and could see no evidence that either American author was attending – which I took as a strong hint the prize would go to one of the two UK authors – I found myself hoping that the winner would be S F Said, for his big sci-fi adventure, Phoenix, if only because it would have been such a significant boost not just for S F Said himself (though we know from the example of Philip Pullman how transforming winning this prize can be) but also for the science fiction genre in general, and a very good thing for heavily illustrated fiction for middle and older readers (the illustrations by Dave McKean are such a significant feature of this book).
The judges must have found it difficult comparing four hugely different books. Let’s, for sake of argument (as I have no insider knowledge of the judges’ deliberations), imagine that it had all come down to a straight choice between The Dark Wild and We Were Liars. How on earth do you make a decision about which is the most deserving book in that scenario? I suppose, although I have some reservations about The Dark Wild (it seems to me it cries out to be illustrated to bring the story fully to life; it also seems somehow odd to award the prize to the middle book in a trilogy), in that case I would also have cast my vote for Torday, conscious that this is a Children’s Fiction Prize, and as fantastic a book as E L Lockart’s is, it is, in my view, a bit of a stretch to call it a children’s book.
I am sure winning the prize will do good things for Piers Torday too, though talking animal fiction is not so in need of a fillip as is sci-fi.
Julia Eccleshare, in her introduction to the presentation, spoke about the longevity of children’s books and the fact that they are very much not here-today-gone-tomorrow; Torday himself, in his acceptance speech, took aim at the Education Secretary’s recent announcement disparaging the study of humanities subjects; and in between, Katherine Rundell, who, in Frank Cottrell Boyce’s absence was the spokesperson for the judges, gave short accounts of the strengths in all the long-listed titles (the video above includes only her words on the shortlisted books).
Katherine Rundell: recommended profile feature with cool rooftop photo
Recommended profile feature on Katherine Rundell by Lorna Bradbury. Worth following through to the full piece if only for the cool rooftop photo of the author taken by Andrew Crowley.
It’s not easy clambering up the precarious ladder in the tiny top–floor lavatory of All Souls College in Oxford, not to mention the dusty trapdoor and the series of rungs that await on the other side. But as I steel my nerves and follow the children’s novelist and thrill–seeker Katherine Rundell into the sky, I feel like Sophie, the heroine of Rooftoppers, which won the Waterstones children’s prize.
Orphaned on her first birthday and found floating at sea in a cello case, Sophie remains convinced that her mother didn’t drown as their ship sank. Rundell’s book recounts Sophie’s search for her mother, with a large part of the action conducted on the rooftops of Paris as she tries to evade the British authorities who have an order out to place her in an orphanage.
http://www.telegraph.co.uk/culture/books/10786201/Katherine-Rundell-childrens-novelist-and-thrill-seeker.html