The Ruth Hadden Memorial Award is a former award for the best first novel published in Britain, which was administered by the Booktrust. It was awarded in the early 1990s and has now been discontinued.[1]

The award was unusual in that the prize was awarded to a completed manuscript before acceptance by a publisher, and the prize money (in 1994, £2000) went to the publishers of the novel to spend on promoting it.[2][3][4]

Winners

References

  1. Ruth Hadden Memorial Award, Booktrust (accessed 18 February 2009)
  2. Andrew Motion (14 February 1993). Books (Last Word): Egos and quids. The Observer, p. 61
  3. 1 2 Louisa Young (28 August 1994). Love thy neighbour; Books. The Sunday Times, p. 8
  4. 1 2 David Robson (8 November 1992). Politics, prickles and perversity. David Robson considers a political Julian Barnes and other new fiction. The Sunday Telegraph, p. 80
  5. Johnson, Buzz. Elean Thomas: Writer with a message of human rights. The Guardian (31 July 2004) (accessed 18 February 2009)
  6. Academi: Members Committee Archived 2015-04-02 at the Wayback Machine (accessed 18 February 2009)
  7. "Tim Pears", British Council Literature, British Council, retrieved 26 January 2016
  8. "Professor Andrew Cowan", British Council Literature, British Council, retrieved 26 January 2016
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