Jerwood Award

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The Royal Society of Literature Jerwood Awards for Non-Fiction are financial awards made to assist new writers of non-fiction to carry out new research, to devote more time to writing.[1] The award is administrated by the Royal Society of Literature on behalf of the Jerwood Charitable Foundation.

Recipients must have a publishing contract and be citizens of either the UK or Ireland, or have been residents in one of these for at least the last three years.[2]

Recipients

2013

2012

  • Ramita Navai for City of Lies: The Undercover Truth About Tehran, Weidenfeld & Nicholson (£10k)
  • Edmund Gordon for Angela Carter: The Biography, Chatto (£5k)
  • Gwen Adshead for A Short Book About Evil, Jessica Kingsley (£5k)

2011

  • James Macdonald Lockhart for Raptor: A Journey Through Britain's Birds of Prey, Fourth Estate (£10k)
  • Gerard Russell for Heirs to Forgotten Kingdoms, Simon & Schuster (£5k)
  • Helen Smith for Edward Garnett: The Uncommon Reader, Jonathan Cape (£5k)
  • Polly Morland for The Society of Timid Souls, or How to Be Brave, Profile (£2k)

2010

2009

  • Caspar Henderson for The Book of Barely Imagined Beings, Granta (£10k)
  • Miles Hollingworth for St Augustine of Hippo: An Intellectual Biography, Continuum (£5k)
  • Selina Mills for Life Unseen: The Story of Blindness, IB Tauris (£5k)

2008

2007

2006

2005

2004

  • Jim Endersby for A Guinea Pig’s History of Biology, Heinemann (£10k)
  • Roland Chambers for The Last Englishman – The Double Life of Arthur Ransome, Faber (£5k)
  • John Stubbs for John Donne: The Reformed Soul, Viking (£5k)

References

  1. ^ "The Royal Society of Literature Jerwood Awards for Non-Fiction". Jerwood Charitable Foundation. Retrieved 2010-01-17. [dead link]
  2. ^ "The Royal Society of Literature Jerwood Awards for Non-Fiction". Royal Society of Literature. Retrieved 2010-01-17.