Showing posts with label book awards. Show all posts
Showing posts with label book awards. Show all posts

Thursday, May 14, 2009

Great achievements to our partnes Tania Hershman and Lynn Montgomery!

We are very happy to update you with two great achievements of books we're collaborating with!

BUTT UGLY by Lynn Montgomery won the Eric Hoffer Award for best children's book!

The Eric Hoffer Award for short prose and books was established at the start of the 21st century as a means of opening a door to writing of significant merit. It honors the memory of the great American philosopher Eric Hoffer by highlighting salient writing, as well as the independent spirit of small publishers. The winning stories and essays are published in Best New Writing, and the book awards are covered in the US Review of Books.

And The White Road and Other Stories by Tania Hershman is longlisted for the prestigious Frank O'Connor International Short Story Award - now renamed the The Cork City – Frank O’Connor Short Story Award.

With a prize of €35,000 for the winning book, this is the world's most lucrative award for a short story collection!


Kudos to both Lynn and Tania! Your books are faboulous and it's a great honor to be your partner and to work with you to green up your books!


Best,
Raz @ Eco-Libris
www.ecolibris.net

Thursday, April 3, 2008

Diane Ackerman Wins The 2008 Orion Book Award

The Orion Book Award was for one of those great finds you sometimes stumble upon while doing research on-line. It is given annually by the Orion Magazine “to a book that has achieved excellence in addressing a growing ecological awareness and the need for a healthier relationship between humans and the natural world.” This goal and focus gets a big thumbs up from Eco-Libris!


Out of the 43 books that have been nominated for the 2008 Orion Book Award (which goes to a book published in 2007), the top prize went to
Diane Ackerman's The Zookeeper's Wife.


Diane Ackerman was born in Waukegan, Illinois. She received an M.A., M.F.A. and Ph.D. from Cornell University. The Zookeeper's Wife, published by W. W. Norton, is a narrative nonfiction about one of the most successful hideouts of World War II, the Warsaw Zoo, and is a tale of people, animals, and subversive acts of compassion.


Here are some of the judges' reasons for awarding the prize:

"The Zookeepers Wife is a groundbreaking work of nonfiction," said selection committee member Mark Kurlansky, "in which the human relationship to nature is explored in an absolutely original way through looking at the Holocaust." Kathleen Dean Moore, the committee's chairperson, said: "A few years ago, 'nature' writers were asking themselves, How can a book be at the same time a work of art, an act of conscientious objection to the destruction of the world, and an affirmation of hope and human decency? The Zookeeper's Wife answers this question."


Ackerman published several nonfiction and poetry books , including the best-selling
A Natural History of the Senses. Here is a tidbit from the introduction of her children's poetry collection, Animal Sense:

A stapler with its tiny fangs
Cannot outwit orangutangs.
Rocks are very good at sitting,
but never walk or take up knitting.
Living things all feel and sense
their way through every happenstance.“

The following books were finalists for the award: Strange as This Weather Has Been: A Novel, by Ann Pancake (Counterpoint); The Wild Trees: A Story of Passion and Daring, by Richard Preston (Random House); Sky Time in Gray's River: Living for Keeps in a Forgotten Place, by Robert Michael Pyle (Houghton Mifflin); The World Without Us, by Alan Weisman (St. Martin's Press/Thomas Dunne Books). Each of these authors will receive $500.

Found by way of Fred Bortz's science blog.


Yours,
Eylon @ Eco-Libris

Plant a tree with Eco-Libris!