This month’s Six Degrees of the library collection post is contributed by guest blogger Lara.
which recognizes excellent authors from Britain and Ireland, and is the only major award to consider children’s literature alongside works intended for adults. The Costa Book Awards were formerly known as the Whitbread Awards, and the last book to win the Whitbread Book of the Year Award before the name change was Hilary Spurling’s Matisse the Master. Using material from private archives and lots of family letters, Spurling evokes a more complete portrait of the master painter than has ever been available before. 
Tomalin apparently studied at Newnham College at the University of Cambridge. Iris Murdoch is another alumna of the College, having studied there as a postgraduate student of philosophy, and is well remembered for many novels and writings with elements of philosophy and morality playing important roles. Several of her works have been honored with major awards, including the 1974 Whitbread for The Sacred and Profane Love Machine, and the 1978 Man Booker prize for The Sea, The Sea. Murdoch’s writing is full of charged emotions, existential crises, and unexpected events that impact every day life. Nine years after winning the Booker, Murdoch was made a Dame Commander of the Order of the British Empire, an honor she shares with fellow writers like Agatha Christie and A. S. Byatt (another alumna of Newnham College!).
The Children’s Book was shortlisted for the 2009 Booker, but when the prize was announced on October 6, it was Hilary Mantel who won this year’s prize, for her novel Wolf Hall. Mantel writes psychological, historical fiction with links to the occult and darkly comical themes. Her 2005 novel, Beyond Black, was also nominated for the Booker Prize as well as the Orange Prize for fiction.
