Press Release - 10 November 2015
The New Zealand Book
Awards Trust and the Library and Information Association of New Zealand
Aotearoa (LIANZA) have announced today that they are merging their respective
children’s book awards, setting the stage for even more activity and visibility
around books for New Zealand children. Complementing the Awards, Hell Pizza has
partnered with the New Zealand Book Awards Trust to sponsor the Hell New
Zealand Reading Challenge.
The awards have a
combined legacy of more than 100 years; the Trust-governed awards began in 1975
and LIANZA’s were established in 1945. A shared passion for children’s
literature has brought the two awards together in a desire to increase children’s
engagement with reading.
“We are thrilled
about this decision to amalgamate the awards,” says New Zealand Book Awards
Trust chair Nicola Legat (right). “The LIANZA awards are highly regarded by authors and
publishers and we acknowledge how difficult it has been for LIANZA’s board to
take this historic decision. We feel privileged to have LIANZA’S trust, and
their awards will be in very good and sustainable hands. They will be cherished
within our organisation.
“The merged awards now have a prize money pool of
$59,500. This amount is a significant contribution to the children’s literature
economy in this country.”
LIANZA
President, Kris Wehipeihana, is equally delighted. “Merging the LIANZA
Children’s Book Awards with the New Zealand Book Awards for Children and Young
Adults is exactly the kind of collaboration that our sector endorses.” she
says. “This is a win for both organisations, and for Aotearoa New Zealand
children’s literature. We’re looking forward to working with the New Zealand
Book Awards Trust.”
While the new awards
will still be known as the New Zealand Book Awards for Children and Young
Adults they will incorporate important elements of the LIANZA awards. The
awards will continue to bestow the Esther Glen title to the junior fiction
category which maintains the tradition of New Zealand’s oldest children’s book
award. In addition, the awards will continue to confer the Elsie Locke title to
the non-fiction award and will also include LIANZA’s award for illustration,
the Russell Clark award.
LIANZA’s Te Kura
Pounamu award for the best book in Te Reo will replace the current Māori
language award. This award will continue to be judged by Māori librarian and
information association, Te Ropu Whakahau,
The awards will be administered
and governed by the New Zealand Book Awards Trust, and a LIANZA representative
will have a permanent seat on its board of trustees.
Hell
Pizza’s high-profile relationship with LIANZA’s awards via its Reading Challenge
will continue within the new format. “The success of the Reading Challenge has been hugely satisfying. With
the announcement of this exciting merger of the awards we can take it to the
next level and encourage even more New Zealand kids to enjoy reading books,”
says Hell
Pizza’s general manager Ben Cumming. “The 150,000 free pizza vouchers we gave out earlier this year amounted
to more than one million books read by Kiwi kids. We would love to build on that
number in 2016. Hell has always challenged the norm, and with kids now becoming
so engrossed with modern technology we are bucking that trend and making
reading cool again. We want pizza to be the gateway drug to reading addiction!”
Nicola Legat concludes, “The New Zealand Book Awards Trust is grateful for the support of our major funder Creative New Zealand as well as our other key sponsors Copyright Licensing New Zealand, Book Tokens Ltd and now Hell Pizza. We very much appreciate their significant investment and we are very much looking forward to next year’s awards.”
The call for entries
in the 2016 New Zealand Book Awards for Children and Young Adults opens on Monday, 16 November 2015 and the awards ceremony will
held be in Wellington in August 2016.
Ends
For more information
please contact:
Adrienne
Olsen, Adroite Communications, Wellington
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T:
04 496 5513
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M: 029 286 3650
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E: adrienne@adroite.co.nz
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New
Zealand Book Awards for Children and Young Adults 2016: Prizes
Margaret Mahy Medal for Book of the Year: $7,500
Best Picture Book Award: $7,500
Esther Glen Award for Junior Fiction: $7,500
Best Young Adult Fiction Award: $7,500
Elsie Locke Award for Best Non-Fiction: $7,500
Russell Clark Award for Best Illustration: $7,500
Te Kura Pounamu Award for Best Book in Te Reo: $7,500
Best First Book: $2,000
Children's Choice in the categories of Picture
Book, Junior Fiction, Young Adult Fiction, Non-Fiction and Te Reo: $1,000 each.
Total prize money: $59,500
New Zealand Book
Awards Trust
The awards are governed by the New Zealand Book
Awards Trust (a registered charity). Members of the Trust are Nicola
Legat (chair), Karen Ferns, Paula Morris, Kyle Mewburn, Stella Chrysostomou, David
Bowles and Julia Marshall. The Trust also governs the Ockham New Zealand Book
Awards (held each May) and National Poetry Day (held each August).
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