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The Jhalak Prize and the Jhalak Children's & YA Prize celebrate books by writers of colour. The prize was founded by writers Sunny Singh and Nikesh Shukla. 

The Jhalak Prize and Jhalak Children's & YA Prize 2024

Jhalak Prize

The shortlists for this year's prizes were announced on 18th April, with twelve titles across two shortlists which demonstrate the exceptional quality and breadth of work produced by this country's writers of colour today.

The Jhalak Prize shortlist features exhilarating fiction, a raw snapshot of contemporary multicultural London, beguiling non-fiction about landscape and the natural world, an audacious true crime tale, and an award-winning poet.

The Jhalak Children’s and Young Adult Prize shortlist features thought-provoking young fiction, vividly illustrated picture books, a YA thriller, and an assured debut for middle grade readers.

 

"Every year, Jhalak Prize shortlists exemplify literary excellence in contemporary Britain and mark them as future classics. I am in awe of the courage required to tackle difficult themes and ideas coupled with the command of the chosen genre and form demonstrated by our shortlistees. These are books about belonging and its price, about confronting injustice with hope, and about the audacity of trying even in face of impossible odds. Most of all, these are books about moral courage, which makes the books on our 2024 shortlists necessary, urgent and timeless."

Sunny Singh, Prize Director

 

Key dates:

Longlist announcement - 14th March

Shortlist announcement - 18th April

Winners announcement in partnership with the British Library - 30th May

 

The two Jhalak Prize awards celebrate writing by British/British resident BAME writers and annually award £1,000 to two winners. 2024 sees the ongoing expansion of the annual Jhalak Art Residency.  An artist of colour is commissioned to create a unique work of art that serves as the trophy for the winner of the Jhalak Prize and the Children’s & YA Prize. This year’s artists are Samer Abdelnour for the Jhalak Prize and Yousef Saif for the Children’s and YA Prize. Find out more about the Jhalak Art Residency and the 2024 artists.  

In Spring 2024, The Jhalak Foundation and the Royal Literary Fund’s WritersMosaic launch The Review, an editorially independent, 16-page biannual insert in The Bookseller magazine.

Explore the full longlists as well as information about this year's judges below, and follow #JhalakPrize24 and @jhalakprize on social media for updates.

 

Win the Jhalak Prize shortlists

The Jhalak Prize shortlist 2024

The Jhalak Children's & YA shortlist 2024

The Jhalak Prize longlist 2024

The Jhalak Children's & YA longlist 2024

The 2024 judges

 

 

Previous winners

Previous winners of the Jhalak Prize are Travis Alabanza for None of the Above (2023), Sabba Khan for The Roles We Play (2022), Jennifer Nansubuga Makumbi for The First Woman (Oneworld) in 2021, Johny Pitts for Afropean: Notes from Black Europe (Penguin) in 2020, Guy Gunaratne for In Our Mad and Furious City (Tinder Press) in 2019, Reni Eddo-Lodge for Why I'm No Longer Talking to White People About Race (Bloomsbury Circus) in 2018 and Jacob Ross for The Bone Readers (Little, Brown) in 2017. Previous winners of the Jhalak Children's & Young Adult Prize are Daniella Jawando for When Our Worlds Collided (2023), Maisie Chan Danny Chung Does Not Do Maths (2022) and Patrice Lawrence for Eight Pieces of Silva (2021).

Visit www.jhalakprize.com to learn more.

Our partnership with Jhalak Prize

At National Book Tokens, we're thrilled to be partnering with the Jhalak Prize for the fourth year in a row to help them increase awareness of the prize titles amongst booksellers, who have always been the best champions of books in their local communities. By distributing point of sale kits to more than 150 bookshops, and social media assets to many hundreds more, and by amplifying their activities through tailored PR support, we help them to create instore displays and shout about the longlists, shortlists and winners from their online channels and in local press.

"Championing the Jhalak Prize has always been so important for us. It has been an honour to have sponsored two winners, one being a Newham author. Such an important prize."
- Vivian Archer, Newham Bookshop

 

The Jhalak Prize shortlist

 

 

Jhalak Prize Shortlist

A Flat Place

by Noreen Masud (Penguin)

Anansi’s Gold: The Man Who Swindled The World

by Yepoka Yeebo (Bloomsbury)

Boundary Road

by Ami Rao (Everything With Words)

Fire Rush

by Jacqueline Crooks (Vintage)

Self-Portrait as Othello

by Jason Allen-Paisant (Carcanet)

Twelve Words for Moss

by Elizabeth-Jane Burnett (Penguin)

 

"These six are books that have made me laugh, cry, hold my breath at some beautiful image, thought, or turn of phrase. These authors have enriched my life as they took me on a journey into their various worlds and I thank them."

Anni Domingo, 2024 judge

 

 

"These authors took me through laughter, heartbreak and joy to places strange and delightful, beyond my imagination. With each page, I whispered, 'Thank you for inviting me in."

Stell Oni, 2024 judge

 

 

"Curating this strong shortlist with fellow judges has been a rewarding experience. Each book is a page-turner."

Denise Saul, 2024 judge and 2023 Jhalak Prize longlistee

 

 

The Jhalak Children's & YA Prize shortlist

 


Jhalak Children's & YA Prize ShortlistGeoffrey Gets the Jitters

by Nadia Shireen (Puffin)

How to Die Famous

by Benjamin Dean (Simon & Schuster)

Safiyyah’s War

by Hiba Noor Khan (Andersen Press)

Steady for This

by Nathanael Lessore (Hot Key Books)

To the Other Side

by Erika Meza (Hodder Children's Books)

Wild Song

by Candy Gourlay (David Fickling Books)

 

"I felt incredibly lifted to know these joyous and thought-provoking books will be seen and read by children up and down the country, who may not have been introduced to these incredible stories had it not been for the Jhalak Prize."

J. P. Rose, 2024 judge and 2023 Jhalak Children's & YA Prize longlistee

 

"There truly is something for every reader here and every single book is a wonder. With stars like these, the future is bright for our industry."

Rashmi Sirdeshpande, 2024 judge and 2023 Jhalak Children's & YA Prize shortlistee

 

"[This shortlist] proves that time and time again, we have some of the finest writers for children and young adults coming out of the U.K."

2024 judge and 2023 Jhalak Children's & YA Prize winner, Danielle Jawando

The Jhalak Prize Longlist 2024

 

Featuring fiction, non-fiction, short stories and poetry, this year's Jhalak Prize longlist comprises twelve outstanding titles, including both new and established writers.

The Jhalak Prize longlist 2024

A Flat Place

by Noreen Masud (Penguin)

A Pebble in The Throat

by Aasmah Mir (Headline)

Anansi’s Gold: The Man Who Swindled The World

by Yepoka Yeebo (Bloomsbury)

Azucar

by Nii Ayikwei Parkes (Peepal Tree Press)

Boundary Road

by Ami Rao (Everything with Words)

Bright Fear

by Mary Jean Chan (Faber & Faber)

Elsewhere

by Yan Ge (Faber & Faber)

Fire Rush

by Jacqueline Crooks (Vintage)

River Spirit

by Leila Aboulela (Saqi Books)

Self-Portrait As Othello

by Jason Allen-Paisant (Carcanet)

Small Worlds

by Caleb Azumah Nelson (Penguin)

Twelve Words for Moss

by Elizabeth-Jane Burnett (Penguin)

 

"The submissions have been so strong this year, and although there was a large number of books, from different genres, the reading didn’t feel like a job. It was a joy to be able to get into the world and minds of so many brilliant authors."

Anni Domingo, 2024 judge

 

 

"The breadth of talent left me in awe, spanning genres from literary and historical fiction to crime and romance. The non-fiction entries, including memoirs, essays, and biographies, demonstrated remarkable depth. The poetry resonated with me on such a profound level that some moved me to tears. I am filled with immense pride!"

Stell Oni, 2024 judge

 

 

"It has been a remarkable and exciting year for the discovery of new voices across the genres of poetry, non-fiction and fiction."

Denise Saul, 2024 judge and 2023 Jhalak Prize longlistee

 

 

 

 

The Jhalak Children's & YA Prize Longlist 2024

 

The Jhalak Children's & YA Prize longlist 2024

The Jhalak Children’s & Young Adult Prize twelve-book longlist includes poetry, picture books, early readers and young adult fiction.

Friendship Never Ends

by Alexandra Sheppard (Knights Of)

Geoffrey Gets The Jitters

by Nadia Shireen (Puffin)

How to Die Famous

by Benjamin Dean (Simon and Schuster)

Koku Akanbi and the Heart of Midnight

by Maria Montunrayo Adebisi, ill. Simone Douglas (Orion Children’s Books)

My Life as a Chameleon

by Diana Anyakwo (Little Brown)

Part of a Story that Started Before Me

Chosen by George the Poet (Penguin)

Poetry Prompts

by Joseph Coelho, ill. Georgie Brikette, Grasya Oliyko, Amanda Quartey & Viola Wang (Quarto Kids)

Safiyyah’s War

by Hiba Noor Khan (Andersen Press)

Steady for This

by Nathanael Lessore (Hot Key Books)

Story of Now

by Shelina Janmohamed, ill. Laura Greenan (Welbeck Children’s Books)

To The Other Side

by Erika Meza (Hodder Children’s Books)

Wild Song

by Candy Gourlay (David Fickling Books)

 

"It's been an honour and a pure joy to spend recent months immersed in such a thrilling spectrum of creativity and eclectic talent. I've been blown away by the sheer breadth of subject, style and genre representing a globally diverse range of cultures and heritage."

J. P. Rose, 2024 judge and 2023 Jhalak Children's & YA Prize longlistee

 

"It’s really something to be living in this golden age of Children’s & YA books. Never let anyone tell you this is a trend. Creators of colour are making the most extraordinary books. What they need, and what this prize and its many supporters can provide, is visibility."

Rashmi Sirdeshpande, 2024 judge and 2023 Jhalak Children's & YA Prize shortlistee

 

"I’ve been completely blown away by so many of the books that I’ve read, which demonstrate the highest level of talent, skill and craft. Choosing a long-list was incredibly hard as there are so many phenomenal writers of colour coming out of the U.K., and writing the very best books for children and young adults. I commend every single one of the authors on this wonderful long-list."

2024 judge and 2023 Jhalak Children's & YA Prize winner, Danielle Jawando

 

The 2024 Judges

 

 

The Jhalak Prize

Anni Domingo, Stella Oni and Denise Saul

 

Anni Domingo

Anni works regularly as a Theatre Director. She currently lectures on Drama and directs at several Drama Colleges. Anni won a place at Hedgebrook Writers in Residence Programme in Seattle and the National Writing Centre’s Escalator programme in Norwich. Her debut novel, Breaking the Maafa Chain, was published in September 2021, by Jacaranda Books, UK and by Pegasus Books, USA in 2022. The novel was short-listed for the Lucy Cavendish First novel Competition and longlisted for Mslexia novel competition 2019. An extract from her novel Breaking the Maafa Chain also won the Myriad Editions First Novel competition in 2018 and is featured in the New Daughters of Africa (2019) anthology edited by Margaret Busby. Her poems and short stories are published in various anthologies including Wild Imperfections, published by Penguin in November 2021. Her first screenplay, Blessed Assurance has just been filmed and will be out later this year. Anni is now working on her second novel Ominira as part of her PhD.

 

Stella Oni

Stella Oni's debut police procedural, Deadly Sacrifice, featuring detective Toks Ade, the first black female police detective in UK fiction, was shortlisted for the SI Leeds Literary Prize in 2016 and published by Jacaranda in 2020. The gripping novel was an Audible Crime and Thriller pick. She has contributed to various anthologies, including Midnight Hour, published by Crooked Lane. She won the International Thriller Writers (ITW) scholarship in 2021 and was a runner-up for the inaugural CrimeFest bursary for writers of colour in 2022. Stella is an ITW judge and was an adjudicator for the Scottish Association of Writers Crime Fiction Pitlochry Prize 2023. She is a popular speaker and also delivers crime fiction workshops. She is writing book two of the Toks Ade Mystery series and the first of her contemporary crime cosy, The London House Mystery series. Stella also creates content in Food and Technology, loves reading and reviewing books on her blog.

 

Denise Saul

Denise Saul’s debut collection The Room Between Us (Pavilion / Liverpool University Press, 2022) was shortlisted for the TS Eliot poetry prize 2022, was a Poetry Book Society Summer Recommendation 2022 and was longlisted for the Jhalak Prize 2023. Her poem ‘Golden Grove’ was highly commended in the Forward Prize 2022. She is the author of two pamphlets: White Narcissi (flipped eye, 2007), a Poetry Book Society Pamphlet Choice; and House of Blue (Rack Press, 2012), a PBS Pamphlet Recommendation. A recent guest editor for The Poetry Review, Denise is a past winner of The Poetry Society’s Geoffrey Dearmer Prize and a Fellow of The Complete Works. She received an ACE Grant for the Arts Award for her video poem collaborative project, Silent Room: A Journey of Language. Denise lives in Surrey.

 

Jhalak Children’s & YA Prize

J. P. Rose, Rashmi Sirdeshpande and Danielle Jawando

 

J. P. Rose

J. P. Rose was born in Manchester, adopted early and grew up in the Yorkshire countryside where racial tolerance ‘wasn’t even a concept’. Feeling isolated, but always a daydreamer, it was animals and writing stories which kept her company. She trained as an actress but frustrated at not only the lack of diversity but the stereotyping of roles she was auditioning for, J. P. eventually decided to focus on her love of the written word, as well as leading writing workshops in prisons before eventually starting to write novels. As a Black author with dual heritage, J. P. is passionate that children’s books are inclusive and diverse, a celebration of self, which help to connect, empower and affirm. J.P.’s teen psychological horror book, The Haunting Of Tyrese Walker, which looks at grief, has been short and longlisted for several awards, including the Jhalak Prize 2023. J.P. is not only a children’s author but also is the bestselling author of over 16 gritty crime novels, writing under the name of Jacqui Rose, selling almost a million copies across all formats. Writing for adults, she has just collaborated with Martina Cole on Martina’s latest novel, and writing for children, J.P. has lots of exciting projects coming out, including a historical middle grade novel. J. P. lives in the countryside with her family surrounded by her beloved horses and other animals.

 

Rashmi Sirdeshpande

Rashmi Sirdeshpande is an award-winning children's author who writes a mix of fiction and non-fiction. Her picture book with Ruchi Mhasane, Dadaji's Paintbrush, was shortlisted for the Jhalak Prize in 2023. She was an official World Book Day author for 2022 and her books have been published around the world and reviewed in a number of newspapers from The Guardian to The Wall Street Journal. Her first picture book, Never Show a T-Rex a Book, illustrated by Diane Ewen, won the 2021 Society of Authors Queen's Knickers Award and the Anna Dewdney Award in the USA and was shortlisted for the Lollies 2022. Her non-fiction book, Good News: Why the World is Not as Bad As You Think, illustrated by Adam Hayes, was shortlisted for the Blue Peter Book Awards.

 

Danielle Jawando

Danielle Jawando is an author and screenwriter. Her debut YA novel, And the Stars Were Burning Brightly, won best senior novel in the Great Reads Award, and was shortlisted for the Waterstones Children’s Book Prize, the YA Book Prize, the Jhalak Children’s & YA Prize, the Branford Boase Award and was long-listed for the CILIP Carnegie Medal. Her previous publications include the non-fiction children’s book Maya Angelou (Little Guides to Great Lives), the short stories Paradise 703 (long-listed for the Finishing Line Press Award) and The Deerstalker (selected as one of six finalists for the We Need Diverse Books short story competition), as well as several short plays performed in Manchester and London. Danielle has also worked on Coronation Street as a storyline writer. Her second novel, When Our Worlds Collided, won the 2023 Jhalak Children’s and YA Prize and the 2023 YA Book Prize. Her third novel, If My Words Had Wings, will be published in May 2024.

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