Somerset Maugham Award

The Somerset Maugham Award is a British literary prize given each year by the Society of Authors. Set up by William Somerset Maugham in 1947 the awards enable young writers to enrich their work by gaining experience in foreign countries. The awards go to writers under the age of 30 with works published in the year before the award; the work can be either non-fiction, fiction or poetry.[1] Since 1964 multiple winners have usually been chosen in the same year. In 1975 and in 2012 the award was not given.[2]

List of winners

2020s

2021[3]

  • Lamorna Ash for Dark, Salt, Clear (Bloomsbury Publishing)
  • Isabelle Baafi for Ripe (Ignition Press)
  • Akeem Balogun for The Storm (Okapi Books)
  • Graeme Armstrong for The Young Team (Pan Macmillan, Picador)[4]

2020[3]

2010s

2019[3]

2018[3]

2017[3]

  • Edmund Gordon for The Invention of Angela Carter
  • Melissa Lee-Houghton for Sunshine
  • Martin MacInnes for Infinite Ground

2016[3]

  • Jessie Greengrass for An Account Of The Decline Of The Great Auk, According To One Who Saw It
  • Daisy Hay for Mr & Mrs Disraeli: A Strange Romance
  • Andrew McMillan for Physical
  • Thomas Morris for We Don't Know What We're Doing
  • Jack Underwood for Happiness

2015[3]

  • Jonathan Beckman for How to Ruin a Queen: Marie Antoinette, the Stolen Diamonds and the Scandal that Shook the French Throne
  • Liz Berry for Black Country
  • Ben Brooks for Lolito
  • Zoe Pilger for Eat My Heart Out

2014[3]

2013[3]

2012[3]

  • No Award

2011[3]

2010[3]

2000s

2009[3]

2008[3]

2007[3]

2006[3]

2005[3]

2004[3]

2003[3]

2002[3]

2001[3]

2000[3]

1900s

1999[3]

1998[3]

1997[3]

1996[3]

1995[3]

1994[3]

1993[3]

1992[3]

1991[3]

1990[3]

1980s

1989[3]

1988[3]

1987[3]

1986[3]

1985[3]

1984[3]

1983[3]

1982[3]

1981[3]

1980[3]

1970s

1979[3]

1978[3]

1977[3]

1976[3]

1975[3]

  • No Award

1974[3]

1973[3]

1972[3]

1971[3]

1970[3]

1960s

1969[3]

1968[3]

1967[3]

1966[3]

1965[3]

1964[3]

1963[3]

1962[3]

1961[3]

1960[3]

1950s

1959[3]

1958[3]

1957[3]

1956[3]

1955[3]

1954[3]

1953[3]

1952[3]

1951[3]

1950[3]

1940s

1949[3]

1948[3]

1947[3]

References

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