Emily Drabble 

Horatio Clare and Penny Thomas win the Branford Boase award

Aubrey and the Terrible Yoot wins the award for first-time children’s authors and their editors
  
  

Horatio Clare
Horatio Clare: This is the book I’m most proud of. Photograph: PR

Horatio Clare and his editor Penny Thomas at Firefly have won the much coveted Branford Boase award 2016 for their book Aubrey and the Terrible Yoot, illustrated by Jane Matthews.

The book tells the story of Aubrey who tries desperately to find a cure for his father’s depression, against the advice of others. Through self-determination and the help of animal friends, Aubrey sets off on a mission to challenge the Terrible Yoot, the relentless “spirit of despair” that has overtaken his father’s mind.

The Branford Boase award is unique in the UK because it recognises the massive input of editors, especially for debut children’s authors.

Aubrey and the Terrible Yoot is not Horatio Clare’s first book (in fact his very first Running for the Hills, an account of a Welsh childhood, won a Somerset Maugham Award, was longlisted for the Guardian First Book Award – and since then he’s written a string of other books for adults) but it’s his first book for children, which is what the Branford Boase is all about.

So how does it feel to win? “Winning this wonderful award means the world to me for three reasons,” explained Horatio Clare. “This is the book I am most proud of: it was written with heart and soul about something painful and important, but meant to read as a joy and an adventure.”

Editor Penny Thomas said she was, “bowled over by Aubrey and the Terrible Yoot from the minute I read it and so delighted to sign Horatio for Firefly. The book is funny, big-hearted and original and derives its brilliance from a superb use of language, an empathy for people and nature and a refusal to patronise the reader. It also has one of the best visionary endings I’ve ever read. I’m overjoyed for Horatio and for Firefly that the Branford Boase judges loved Aubrey too. It means an enormous amount to all of us at Firefly to win this unique award.”

The book was funded by the Welsh Books Council: “State support for writers in Wales is exemplary,” said Horatio Clare, “I and many other Welsh writers are working to repay the support and faith placed in us by the executive and the people of Wales, with books which will travel and last. This award is theirs as much as mine.”

This year the judges were Russell Allen (Public Librarian of the Year 2016) bookseller Simon Key, editor Marion Lloyd and author Rosie Rowell (winner of last year’s Branford Boase with Leopold Blue. The panel was chaired by Julia Eccleshare, children’s books editor of the Guardian. Judges called the book: “something very special - a book that is both pensive and sparkling with originality and life. It is a testament to the healing power of the imagination.”

Congratulations to all the authors and editors shortlisted for this year’s award, and particularly to the winners of course!

 

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