Children's author wins top British Book Award
- Published
Katherine Rundell has been named author of the year at the British Book Awards - the first time in six years that a children's writer has picked up the accolade.
Rundell's latest release, fantasy adventure Impossible Creatures, also won the prize for children's fiction book of the year.
Other notable winners included GT Karber's murder-themed puzzle book Murdle, which was named overall book of the year at the ceremony in London.
And Rebecca F Kuang took the fiction book of the year award for the second year in a row.
This year, she won for Yellowface - which has been much talked about since its release - after triumphing in the same category with Babel in 2023.
Rundell is the first children's writer to be crowned author of the year since Philip Pullman in 2018.
She joins other recent winners including Marian Keyes, Richard Osman and Bonnie Garmus.
Impossible Creatures is the first novel in a new trilogy by Rundell, and was also named Waterstones book of the year for 2023.
- Published8 March
- Published16 May 2023
- Published24 May 2022
Karber's Murdle was inspired by the addictive web-based game Wordle, and the US author and computer programmer joins previous winners EL James and Sally Rooney in winning the book of the year award.
His puzzle collection also won the prize for non-fiction lifestyle and illustrated book of the year.
Former Conservative MP Rory Stewart took home the non-fiction narrative book of the year prize for Politics on the Edge.
His memoir about life in Parliament beat high-profile autobiographies by the Duke of Sussex and Britney Spears, which were nominated in the same category.
Lisa Jewell won two prizes on the night - crime and thriller book of the year and audiobook fiction book of the year, both for None of This is True, her bestselling hardback in 20 years as an author.
The children's non-fiction award went to Atinuke's Brilliant Black British History, which was praised for its accessibility to children of all ages.
Elsewhere, Fern Brady's Strong Female Character, which won the audiobook non-fiction award, was described as "impactful and intimate" for its exploration of the author's autism.
Philip Jones, who chaired the judging panel, said: “Our winning authors, illustrators, and the teams behind their books showcase an industry at the height of its game and at the absolute centre of the creative sector.
"At a time when words and their meaning matter more than ever before, to see the world of books in such excellent health is surely something to celebrate."
Winners in full
Author of the year - Katherine Rundell
Book of the year - GT Karber, Murdle
Audiobook fiction - Lisa Jewell, None of This is True
Audiobook non-fiction - Fern Brady, Strong Female Character
Children’s fiction - Katherine Rundell, Impossible Creatures
Children’s Illustrated - Jamie Smart, Bunny vs Monkey: Multiverse Mix-up
Children’s non-fiction - Atinuke, Brilliant Black British History
Crime & thriller - Lisa Jewell, None of This is True
Debut fiction - Alice Winn, In Memoriam
Discover - Raksha Dave, Lessons from Our Ancestors
Fiction - Rebecca F Kuang, Yellowface
Non-fiction lifestyle & illustrated - GT Karber, Murdle
Non-fiction narrative - Rory Stewart, Politics on the Edge
Pageturner - Rebecca Yarros, Fourth Wing