Yesterday the Society of Authors’ awards were announced and the prizes handed out at a ceremony in London. As a McKitterick Prize judge, I was asked last month to give a 50-word blurb on the shortlist as a whole—
Each of these six novels has a fully realized style. So confident and inviting are they that it’s hard to believe they are debuts. With nuanced characters and authentic settings and dilemmas, they engage the mind and delight the emotions. I will be following these authors’ careers with keen interest.
—and on each individual shortlisted title:
Etymology and Shakespeare studies are the keys to solving a cold case in Susie Dent’s clever, engrossing mystery, Guilty by Definition.
Psychoanalysis, motherhood, and violence against women are resounding themes in Lauren Elkin’s Scaffolding. As history repeats itself one sweltering Paris summer, the personal and political structures undergirding the protagonists’ parallel lives come into question. This fearless, sophisticated work ponders what to salvage from the past—and what to tear down.
Clinical Intimacy’s mysterious antihero comes to life through interviews with his family, friends and clients. The brilliant oral history format builds a picture of isolation among vulnerable populations, only alleviated by care and touch—especially during Covid-19. Ewan Gass’s intricate story reminds us of the ultimate unknowability of other people.
In Monumenta, Lara Haworth braids satire, magic realism, and metafiction into a compact and surprising meditation on how we seek to memorialise the tragedies of history.
Set in small-town Ireland, The Coast Road is a subtle, compassionate novel in which the characters learn to write their own stories rather than bow to convention and fate. Alan Murrin is a must-read author for fans of Claire Keegan, Louise Kennedy, and Colm Tóibín.
Only Here, Only Now is bursting with vitality. With her broken heart and fizzing brain, Cora Mowat vows to escape her grim Fife town. Tom Newlands’s evocation of the 1990s—and of his teenage narrator—is utterly convincing. Soaring above grief, poverty, and substance abuse, Cora’s voice is pure magic.
Our winner was Tom Newlands for Only Here, Only Now and our runner-up was Lauren Elkin for Scaffolding. (What an honour to have my blurb for the former used in the winners press release, the ceremony programme, and social media publicity.)
Newlands was also a runner-up for the ADCI Literary Prize “for a disabled or chronically ill writer, for an outstanding novel containing a disabled or chronically ill character or characters.” Here’s an excerpt from his statement for the press release:
To have my debut novel recognised in these two categories is particularly meaningful for me because they are linked by my experience. I didn’t start writing until the age of 40, in large part because growing up neurodivergent I didn’t feel my thought processes or methods of working were compatible with the production of a novel. There were no role models out there publishing stories like mine, and in the end, I wrote Only Here, Only Now because I couldn’t find the novel I wanted to read – a warm, vivid and funny story that examined poverty, disability and belonging, and that featured characters rarely found in British fiction.

Looking back to early on in this prize journey (which started back in November) … here was some of my early reading:

And our longlist:

A couple of my favourite books from my reading that didn’t make the shortlist were:
Hyper by Agri Ismaïl [I longlisted it – and then shortlisted it – but was outvoted]
Following a Kurdish family across several decades, this is a zeitgeist-y story that examines questions of national and personal autonomy. With its Dubai, Baghdad, London, and New York settings, it sets the second generation’s luxury, high finance, and fully online worlds against their parents’ bitter experience of exile after a failed independence movement. With its themes of dysfunction and failures and the long view of how we got here from there, it reminded me of Jonathan Franzen’s body of work.
How to Be Somebody Else by Miranda Pountney [It had two votes to make the shortlist, but because it was so similar to Scaffolding in its basics (a thirtysomething woman in a big city, the question of motherhood, and pregnancy loss) we decided to cut it.]
This is the addictively readable story of Dylan, a late-thirties English woman who gives up her New York City advertising job and ponders authorship and motherhood while house-sitting an acquaintance’s apartment—and carrying on an affair with the married downstairs neighbour. As we see her interact with family and friends, we come to appreciate her not as some stereotypical ‘sad girl’ or ‘disaster woman’, but as an Everywoman seeking the time and space to become herself. It’s a sharp and witty novel for fans of Sally Rooney.
For the first time, I got to attend the SoA Awards ceremony in person yesterday. It was a hot day to be travelling in London, and after the oven of the Bakerloo line I was grateful to escape into the cool of Southwark Cathedral and its grounds. It was such a juxtaposition between the sleek City architecture and the ancient refuge of a church.

I worried that on such a warm and then busy day Hodge the cathedral cat wouldn’t show himself, but as I picked up my name badge he was asking to be let inside from the courtyard. He didn’t seem interested in strokes so I followed him at a respectful distance and let him settle in for a watchful rest.
Nominated authors and judges were treated to an exceptional afternoon tea, followed by the ceremony and drinks reception. It was lovely to meet my fellow judges Anietie Isong and Kathy O’Shaughnessy (author of the fantastic In Love with George Eliot, which won the SoA’s Paul Torday Memorial Prize) in the flesh as I’d only met them on Zoom before. We chatted a good bit with Lara Haworth, one of our shortlistees, and with Anne Booth, one of the Queen’s Knickers Award (children’s books) nominees, and also got to briefly meet Tom Newlands when he arrived for the ceremony. I always look out for literary ‘celebrities’ at such events and yesterday spotted Naomi Alderman, Caroline Bird, Joanne Harris and Alice Jolly.

Dean Rev. Mark Oakley gave a welcome address via video, praising authors for bringing “resonance” rather than just “relevance.” He exhorted us, in the words of David Copperfield, to “read as if for life.” Joseph Coelho then gave a terrific keynote speech celebrating words written by humans (as opposed to an inaccurate AI-written bio of himself that he once encountered) and encouraging shortlistees, especially, to take time to bask in their achievement. Rejection is an ongoing, annual thing for him even at this stage of his career – he still remembers the £50 poetry gigs, changing in library toilets and school staff rooms; and the 12 years he spent trying to get published – even after he became the youngest-ever children’s laureate in 2022. “Wait for no one,” he challenged us: no one is going to give you permission or come save you, so go out there and do what you’re meant to do.
What an all-round fantastic experience this was! I’m so grateful to the Society of Authors for the opportunity.
Other notable winners announced yesterday included:
- Ashani Lewis (the only double winner): the Betty Trask Prize and Somerset Maugham award for Winter Animals
- Hisham Matar & Elif Shafak: the Gordon Bowker Volcano Prize (for a novel focusing on the experience of travel away from home), joint winners for My Friends and There Are Rivers in the Sky


What a wonderful experience Rebecca! I am definitely going to check out your winner and runner up.
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So pleased to hear that!
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So exciting to be part of that!
I’ll be looking up How to Be Somebody Else given its similarities to Scaffolding (which I loved).
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It was!
The Pountney is a little more of a typical disaster-woman novel than Scaffolding, but it has those surface similarities.
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Oh, Rebecca, what a great experience from beginning to end! I love the sound of the winner and will definitely ask my library to buy it in. Glad you got to have that lovely afternoon tea and to say hi to Hodge.
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It was reminiscent of our Booker experience but more low-key, not taking itself as seriously. A really lovely evening. One day you’ll be up on that stage getting an award!
I’m glad the Newlands appeals to you.
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Aww! 🙂
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What an experience! And so well deserved. I like your 50 word ‘blurb’ very much. It says so much and so concisely. So far, from all these I’ve only read the Alan Murrin, which I loved. I’ve got lots of catching up to do!
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Thank you! I hope you’ll enjoy the others you try.
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👍
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What a lovely day! I’m so pleased you met Hodge. I very nearly bought Scaffolding and Guilty by Definition in Chester Waterstones on my way home today but decided to leave it until the weekend. I can add the winner to my haul.
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It was fantastic. And I have you to thank for getting me involved with the McKitterick in the first place several years ago.
Ooh, you’ve got some treats coming up there 🙂 Two of the three are out in paperback now.
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You’re the ideal candidate! I’m delighted it’s worked so well for you.
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What a great experience! The two novels you highlighted are the two I’m most interested in reading, and I’m fascinated by Tom Newlands’ points about neurodiversity. It’s something I worry about myself when agents and editors go on about characters being relatable, and emotional connection; I never quite know what they mean, and it feels like it excludes anyone who thinks differently or handles emotions differently. There needs to be more space in fiction for these less ‘relatable’ stories.
Also interesting to see a bit of a glimpse behind the scenes of your judging process 🙂 Totally understand the reasoning re. Pountney, but also feel a bit sorry for her! The Hyper recommendation is also noted.
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So glad you’re keen to read those two — I’ll be interested to hear your thoughts.
It is a shame that what else has been published around the same time inevitably colours responses to someone’s work. There was a young author at the reception, a Betty Trask shortlistee, who said it made her cringe but the elevator pitch for her novel was Sally Rooney meets Agatha Christie.
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Yay, Hodge made an appearance after all! And what an amazing time of it you’ve had. So much to enjoy and reflect upon and share. Love all the photos and, as others have said, the peek behind-the-scenes. I’m sure that those who “just missed” will be glad to know of your admiration and support of their work even if they did not win. Some small consolation.
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Going to the ceremony on my own was outside my comfort zone, but I’m so glad I did.
That’s true, being longlisted for a prize is certainly something valuable to add to a CV.
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Congratulations!
And of all these, I’m most intrigud by Guilty by Definition!
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Ah yes, I recall you’re a mystery lover. That’s one you seem sure to enjoy!
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What an awesome event to be a part of! And great choices!
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Thanks! I feel very lucky to have had the experience.
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What a wonderful experience. Also: Hodge!!!
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I thought for sure he’d be hiding from the heat and crowds. Seeing him was the icing on the cake.
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[…] like a giant Jazzle’. Rebecca liked this a lot more than I did; check out her thoughts here. Source: Kindle 99p […]
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