Carnegie Medal (literary award)
The Carnegie Medal is a British literary award that annually recognises one outstanding new English-language book for children or young adults. It is conferred upon the author by the Chartered Institute of Library and Information Professionals. CILIP calls it "the UK's oldest and most prestigious book award for children's writing".
The Medal is named after the Scottish-born American philanthropist Andrew Carnegie, who founded more than 2,800 libraries in the English-speaking world, including at least one in more than half of British library authorities. It was established in 1936 by the British Library Association, to celebrate the centenary of Carnegie's birth and inaugurated in 1937 with the award to Arthur Ransome for Pigeon Post and the identification of two 'commended' books. The first Medal was dated 1936, but since 2007 the Medal has been dated by its year of presentation, which is now one or two years after publication.
In 1955, the Kate Greenaway Medal was established as a companion to the Carnegie Medal. The Kate Greenaway Medal recognises "distinguished illustration in a book for children". Both awards were established and administered by the Library Association, until it was succeeded by CILIP in 2002.
Nominated books must be written in English and first published in the UK during the preceding school year. Until 1969, the award was limited to books by British authors first published in England. The first non-British medalist was Australian author Ivan Southall for Josh. The original rules also prohibited winning authors from future consideration. The first author to win a second Carnegie Medal was Peter Dickinson in 1981, who won consecutively for Tulku and City of Gold. There were eight repeat winners to 2018.
The winner is awarded a gold medal and £500 worth of books donated to the winner's chosen library. In addition, since 2016 the winner has received a £5,000 cash prize from the Colin Mears bequest.
Latest rendition
won the 2020 Carnegie Medal for Lark, a tale of two young brothers who must battle for survival on the North Yorkshire Moors after the weather turns dangerous. Lark is the fourth and final book in the "Truth of Things" series about working-class brothers Nicky and Kenny, the younger of whom is learning disabled.There were eight books on the 2020 shortlist, each published between September 2018 and August 2019:
- Dean Atta, The Black Flamingo
- Nick Lake, Nowhere on Earth
- Anthony McGowan, Lark
- Randy Ribay, Patron Saints of Nothing
- Annet Schaap, Lampie
- Marcus Sedgwick and Julian Sedgwick, Voyages in the Underworld of Orpheus Black
- Angie Thomas, On the Come Up
- Chris Vick, Girl. Boy. Sea.
Process
CILIP members may nominate books each September and October, with the full list of valid nominations published in November. The longlist, chosen by the judges from the nominated books, is published in February. The judging panel comprises 12 children's librarians, all of whom are members of CILIP's Youth Libraries Group. The shortlist is announced in March and the winner in June.According to CILIP, "all categories of books, including poetry, non-fiction and graphic novels, in print or ebook format, for children and young people are eligible". However, titles must be English-language works first published in the UK during the preceding year. Multiple-author anthologies are excluded, however co-authored single works are eligible.
Young people from across the UK take part in shadowing groups organised by secondary schools and public libraries, to read and discuss the shortlisted books.
CILIP instructs the judging panel to consider plot, characterisation, and style "where appropriate". Furthermore, it states that "the book that wins the Carnegie Medal should be a book of outstanding literary quality. The whole work should provide pleasure, not merely from the surface enjoyment of a good read, but also the deeper subconscious satisfaction of having gone through a vicarious, but at the time of reading, a real experience that is retained afterwards".
Winners
Up to 2018 there have been 79 Medals awarded over 82 years, spanning the period from 1936 to 2017. No eligible book published in 1943, 1945, or 1966 was considered suitable by the judging panel.From 2007 onward, the medals are dated by the year of presentation. Prior to this, they were dated by the calendar year of their British publication.
Forty winning books were illustrated in their first editions, including every one during the first three decades. Six from 1936 to 1953 were illustrated or co-illustrated by their authors; none since then.
Winners of multiple awards
Eight authors have won two Carnegie Medals, which was prohibited for many years.- Peter Dickinson 1979, 1980
- Berlie Doherty 1986, 1991
- Anne Fine 1989, 1992
- Geraldine McCaughrean 1988, 2018
- Margaret Mahy 1982, 1984
- Jan Mark 1976, 1983
- Patrick Ness 2011, 2012
- Robert Westall 1975, 1981
Six books have won both the Carnegie Medal and the annual Guardian Children's Fiction Prize, which was inaugurated 1967.
- Alan Garner, The Owl Service
- Richard Adams, Watership Down
- Geraldine McCaughrean, A Pack of Lies
- Anne Fine, Goggle-Eyes
- Philip Pullman, His Dark Materials 1: Northern Lights
- Melvin Burgess, Junk
Only The Graveyard Book by Neil Gaiman has won both the Carnegie Medal and the equivalent American award, the Newbery Medal.
Author Sharon Creech, who won the Carnegie for Ruby Holler, previously won the Newbery and two U.K. awards for Walk Two Moons.
Four writers have won both the Carnegie and the US Michael L. Printz Award. The Printz Award is an American Library Association literary award that annually recognises the "best book written for teens, based entirely on its literary merit". The four writers are David Almond, Aidan Chambers, Geraldine McCaughrean, and Meg Rosoff. Chambers alone has won both for the same book, the 1999 Carnegie and 2003 Printz for the novel Postcards from No Man's Land.
In its scope, books for children or young adults, the British Carnegie corresponds to the American Newbery and Printz awards.
Carnegie of Carnegies
To commemorate the 70th anniversary of the Carnegie Medal in 2007, CILIP created a 'Living Archive' on the Carnegie Medal website with information about each of the winning books and conducted a poll to identify the nation's favourite Carnegie Medal winner, to be named the "Carnegie of Carnegies". The winner, announced on 21 June 2007 at the British Library, was Northern Lights by Philip Pullman. It was the expected winner, garnering 40% of the votes in the UK, and 36% worldwide.70th Anniversary Top Ten
- David Almond, Skellig,
- Melvin Burgess, Junk,
- Kevin Crossley-Holland, Storm,
- Jennifer Donnelly, A Gathering Light,
- Alan Garner, The Owl Service,
- Eve Garnett, The Family from One End Street,
- Mary Norton, The Borrowers,
- Philippa Pearce, Tom's Midnight Garden,
- Philip Pullman, Northern Lights,
- Robert Westall, The Machine Gunners,
Shortlists
Date is year of publication before 2006. Selections were announced and medals presented early in the next year.1936 to 1993
From 1936 to 1993, there were 55 Medals awarded in 58 years. CCSU library listings for that period include one Special Commendation, 23 Highly Commended books, and about 130 Commended books. Except for the inaugural year 1936, only the 24 Special and Highly Commended books are listed here.;1936, the inaugural publication year
Medalist:
Commended:
CCSU listings for 1954 include six commendations, the first since 1936. Beginning 1966 there were some "high commendations" and those were approximately annual by 1979. Only the high commendations are listed here.
;1954, Special Commendation:
The special commendation to Harold Jones in 1955 for his 1954 illustration of Lavender's Blue was "a major reason" for the Library Association to establish the Kate Greenaway Medal that year. No 1955 work was judged worthy in 1956, so that Medal was actually inaugurated one year later.
;1966
;1967
;1974
;1979
;1980
;1981
;1982
;1983
;1984
;1985
;1986
;1987
;1988
;1989
;1990
;1991
;1992
;1993
- + Melvin Burgess, The Baby and Fly Pie
- + Jenny Nimmo, The Stone Mouse
1994 to 2002
Where the entire shortlist is given here, boldface and asterisk marks the winner, plus marks the highly commended books, and dash marks the commended books.
1994
- Lynne Reid Banks, Broken Bridge
- * Theresa Breslin, Whispers in the Graveyard
- + Berlie Doherty, Willa and Old Miss Annie
- + Lesley Howarth, Maphead
- Michael Morpurgo, Arthur, High King of Britain
- Jenny Nimmo, Griffin's Castle
- Robert Westall, A Time of Fire
- Jacqueline Wilson, The Bed and Breakfast Star
- Nina Bawden, Granny the Pag
- Robert Cormier, In the Middle of the Night
- – Susan Gates, Raider
- Garry Kilworth, The Brontë Girls
- Michael Morpurgo, The Wreck of the Zanzibar
- * Philip Pullman, Northern Lights — first of a trilogy, His Dark Materials
- Jill Paton Walsh, Thomas and the Tinners
- + Jacqueline Wilson, Double Act
- * Melvin Burgess, Junk — about teenage heroin addiction and anarchism
- Michael Coleman, Weirdo's War
- + Anne Fine, The Tulip Touch
- Elizabeth Laird, Secret Friends
- – Terry Pratchett, Johnny and the Bomb — third of a trilogy
- Philip Pullman, Clockwork, illus. Peter Bailey
- Chloe Rayban, Love in Cyberia
- Jacqueline Wilson, Bad Girls, illus. Nick Sharratt
- Malorie Blackman, Pig Heart Boy
- * Tim Bowler, River Boy
- + Henrietta Branford, Fire, Bed and Bone — about the English peasants' revolt of 1381
- Geraldine McCaughrean, Forever X
- Philip Ridley, Scribbleboy
- – J. K. Rowling, Harry Potter and the Philosopher's Stone — first of seven Harry Potter books
- Theresa Tomlinson, Meet me by the Steel Men
- * David Almond, Skellig
- Robert Cormier, Heroes
- Peter Dickinson, The Kin
- Chris d'Lacey, Fly, Cherokee, Fly
- Susan Price, The Sterkarm Handshake
- David Almond, Kit's Wilderness
- Bernard Ashley, Little Soldier
- David Almond, Heaven Eyes
- – Melvin Burgess, The Ghost Behind the Wall
- Sharon Creech, The Wanderer
- Jamila Gavin, Coram Boy
- + Adéle Geras, Troy
- Alan Gibbons, Shadow of the Minotaur
- – Sharon Creech, Love that Dog, 9+
- Peter Dickinson, The Ropemaker, 11+
- Eva Ibbotson, Journey to the River Sea, 9+
- Elizabeth Laird, Jake's Tower, 11+
- Geraldine McCaughrean, The Kite Rider, 11+
- + Geraldine McCaughrean, Stop the Train, 10+
- Kevin Brooks, Martyn Pig, 12+
2003 to date
Runners-up within the shortlist are not distinguished since 2002.2003
- David Almond, The Fire Eaters, 10+
- * Jennifer Donnelly, A Gathering Light, 12+
- Mark Haddon, The Curious Incident of the Dog in the Night-Time, 12+
- Elizabeth Laird, The Garbage King, 10+
- Michael Morpurgo, Private Peaceful, 10+
- Linda Newbery, Sisterland, 13+
- Anne Cassidy, Looking for JJ, 13+
- Gennifer Choldenko, Al Capone Does My Shirts, 11+
- * Frank Cottrell Boyce, Millions, 9+
- Sharon Creech, Heartbeat, 10+
- Eva Ibbotson, The Star of Kazan, 10+
- Philip Pullman, The Scarecrow and his Servant, 8+
- David Almond, Clay, 11+
- Frank Cottrell Boyce, Framed, 9+
- Jan Mark, Turbulence, 12+
- Geraldine McCaughrean, The White Darkness, 12+
2007
- Kevin Brooks, The Road of the Dead, 14+
- Siobhan Dowd, A Swift Pure Cry, 13+
- Anne Fine, The Road of Bones, 12+
- Ally Kennen, Beast, 12+
- Kevin Crossley-Holland, Gatty's Tale, 10+
- Linzi Glass, Ruby Red, 12+
- Elizabeth Laird, Crusade, 10+
- Tanya Landman, Apache: Girl Warrior, 12+
- Frank Cottrell Boyce, Cosmic, 8+
- Kevin Brooks, Black Rabbit Summer, 14+
- Eoin Colfer, Airman, 9+
- Laurie Halse Anderson, Chains, 11+
- Theresa Breslin, Prisoner of the Inquisition, 12+
- Geraldine McCaughrean, The Death-Defying Pepper Roux, 10+
- David Almond, My Name is Mina, 9+
- Lissa Evans, Small Change for Stuart, 8+
- Sonya Hartnett, The Midnight Zoo, 9+
- Ali Lewis, Everybody Jam, 12+
- Andy Mulligan, Trash, 12+
- Sarah Crossan, The Weight of Water, 9+
- Roddy Doyle, A Greyhound of a Girl, 9+
- Julie Berry, All the Truth That's in Me, 14+
2015
- Brian Conaghan, When Mr Dog Bites, 14+
- Sarah Crossan, Apple and Rain, 11+
- Sally Gardner, Tinder, 11+
- Frances Hardinge Cuckoo Song, 11+
- Elizabeth Laird, The Fastest Boy in the World, 9+
- Frank Cottrell Boyce, Sputnik's Guide to Life on Earth
- Zana Fraillon, The Bone Sparrow
- Bonnie-Sue Hitchcock, The Smell of Other People's Houses
- Glenda Millard, The Stars at Oktober Bend
- Mal Peet & Meg Rosoff, Beck
- Philip Reeve, Railhead
2018
- Lissa Evans, Wed Wabbit
- Will Hill, After the Fire
2019