Book Prizes & Awards for Indie Authors - Alliance of Independent Authors - E-Book

Book Prizes & Awards for Indie Authors E-Book

Alliance of Independent Authors

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Are you an indie author who wants to win an award for your writing and publishing? You can.


Indie authors have long been excluded from the most prestigious book prizes, awards, and competitions, but the awards scene is changing. According to Hannah Jacobson, founder of BookAwardPro.com, “Over 92% of all book awards are available to indie and self-published authors,” including many that are for indie authors only.


This short guide provides the latest updates and shares with you:


- Types of awards and prizes
- Awards open to indie authors
- How to enter book awards


If you’d like to get your foot in the awards scene door, Book Prizes & Awards for Indie Authors will show you the way.

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Seitenzahl: 60

Veröffentlichungsjahr: 2024

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Copyright © 2021 Alliance of Independent Authors

The authors’s moral rights have been asserted.

All rights reserved.

Font Publications is the publishing imprint for Orna Ross’s fiction and poetry and the Go Creative! books and planners and Alliance of Independent Authors publishing guides by Orna a. Ross.

All Enquiries: [email protected]

* * *

BOOK PRIZES & AWARDS FOR INDIE AUTHORS

ALLi’s Guide to Awards, Contents and Critical Acclaim

E-book: 978-1-913588-31-1

Paperback: 978-1-913588-32-8

Large Print: 978-1-913588-33-5

Hardback: 978-1-913588-34-2

Audiobook: 978-1-913588-35-9

Created with Vellum

BOOK PRIZES & AWARDS FOR INDIE AUTHORS

ALLI’S GUIDE TO AWARDS, CONTENTS AND CRITICAL ACCLAIM

SHORT PUBLISHING GUIDES FOR INDIE AUTHORS

BOOK 5

ALLIANCE OF INDEPENDENT AUTHORS

CONTENTS

Introduction

I. Literary Contests, Awards, and Prizes

1. What Is the Difference Between a Contest, a Literary Award, and a Prize?

2. Do Book Awards Matter?

3. Are Indie Authors Welcome Here?

4. Prizes Exclusive to Indie Authors

5. Awards Specific to Genres or Formats

II. Entering Awards

6. Advice on Entering

7. Author Beware: Contests and Awards Ratings

8. Consider Volunteering as a Judge

Author Prepare: Your Checklist for Entering

Resources

Acknowledgments

Your Next Step

Other Guides

ALLi Supports and Resources

INTRODUCTION

Have you ever wanted to win an award for your writing and self-publishing?

You can.

For a long time, indie authors were excluded from prizes, awards, and competitions. But the awards scene is vastly changing, and this guidebook provides the latest updates and steps you need to enter your work in book contests that you may not know are open to you—the indie author. As Hannah Jacobson, founder of Bookawardpro.com, writes: “Part of the problem is author awareness. Many indies aren't aware they are eligible for some well-known awards such as the Pulitzer Prize.”

ALLi wants to change that and champion indie authors who want to pursue the accolades (and increased sales) associated with awards and prizes. This ALLi Awards and Prizes guidebook began as a single chapter in our book Open Up to Indie Authors and is a core part of that campaign. Today there are numerous literary prizes for books of all genres, themes, and backgrounds, including many that are now open only to self-publishers. That’s cause for celebration as well as a new opportunity for you to become an award-winning indie author.

Many of these awards are prestigious, increasingly high profile, and doing wonderful work that we at ALLi wholeheartedly support, while some should be approached with caution. Undoubtedly there will be new ones in both categories in the coming years. This guidebook shows you how to find the right program for your book and increase the likelihood that you can call yourself a WINNER.

In this guidebook, we’ll examine the major prizes and also the wide-reaching spectrum of contests and awards that are either open to some, open to all, or open specifically to self-published books. This is in part because what is true at the top for the major prizes tends to be equally true all across the spectrum of competitions. What readers and writers need to see are more doors opening at the top, bringing self-publishing onto a wider platform. Many of the smaller prizes are already more flexible.

When we first wrote about this topic back in 2013, the Folio Prize, now known as the Rathbones Folio Prize, had just launched. The prize was open to self-published titles from the very start, and indeed the 2014 shortlist included Sergio De La Pava’s originally self-published A Naked Singularity.

The Folio Prize was intended as a response to the original Man Booker Prize. The Booker Prize, formerly known as the Booker Prize for Fiction and the Man Booker Prize, was established in 1969. According to its website, The Booker Prize is:

The leading literary award in the English speaking world, which has brought recognition, reward, and readership to outstanding fiction for over 50 years. Awarded annually to the best novel of the year written in English and published in the UK or Ireland. The winner of The Booker Prize receives international publicity which usually leads to a sales boost.

The 2012 Man Booker Prize was a watershed moment. The prize attracted a lot of negative attention in 2011 following remarks by judges that they were looking for “readable” books. The shortlist of 2012 went a long way toward silencing the critics, and the inclusion of books from small presses such as Salt Publishing’s The Lighthouse and Swimming Home were an important part of this. The case was made unequivocally for the literary quality of the work being published by small presses as well as the centrality of small presses among the best of contemporary literature. Since then, small presses have regularly represented on prize lists. We’ve seen the crowdfunding publishing platform Unbound hit the Booker shortlist with Paul Kingsnorth’s The Wake. For two years in a row, in 2015 and 2016, the same tiny press, Oneworld, has published the winner. The Booker Prize has since opened its entries to include those from the USA. Indie authors, though, are still not eligible.

The experience of small independent presses is in many ways an excellent illustration and template, both for self-publishing writers and for prize organizers. Small presses in general are being talked about in the media along with their individual books. It seems reasonable that all books, however they are produced, should be compared on an equal basis for what they say and how they say it, rather than how they came into being.

No doubt advances have been made, some of which we couldn’t possibly have foreseen: Bob Dylan winning the Nobel Prize in Literature, anyone? But that moment was hardly the opening of the floodgates. In this guidebook, we will examine how the contest landscape has changed and what changes have yet to be made.

If entry for most high-profile and prestigious prizes is opened up to self-published as well as trade-published authors, the best writing will rise to the top regardless of its origin, and it will soon be clear that self-published books can be of the very highest quality.

It is only when the major national and international awards are truly inclusive that good writing of all kinds can compete fairly and equally.

PARTI

LITERARY CONTESTS, AWARDS, AND PRIZES

1

WHAT IS THE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN A CONTEST, A LITERARY AWARD, AND A PRIZE?

Traditionally, the words “contest, “award,” and “prize” have been used interchangeably when referring to any or all of the book award programs available to authors. This has made it much harder to classify and break them down because there isn’t a strict definition. Let’s look at each one in more detail.

What Is a Contest or Competition?

A contest or competition is the easiest to define because you have to “enter” it.