International Prizes in Children's Literature. Prizes for children's writers

Details 18.04.2017

National literary prize"Big Book"

The award is given to the best prose work of large form published in the reporting year. This is the largest in Russia and the second in the world (after the Nobel) literary prize, established in 2005. General prize fund- 6.1 million rubles, formed from interest on deposits made by large Russian businessmen and firms that created the "Center for Support of Domestic Literature". Three awards are given annually.

In 2016, the award winner was Leonid Yuzefovich for the novel "Winter road"

Leonid Yuzefovich - screenwriter, historian, candidate of historical sciences. Author of detective and historical novels. Winner of literary awards: "National Bestseller" (2001, "Prince of the Wind") and "Big Book" (2009, "Cranes and Dwarfs").

Second Prize Awarded Evgeny Vodolazkin for the novel "Aviator"

Evgeny Germanovich Vodolazkin - specialist in ancient Russian literature, doctor philological sciences, student of D. S. Likhachev, writer. In Russia, he is called "Russian Umberto Eco", in America - after the release of "Lavr" in English - "Russian Marquez". Winner of the Big Book and Yasnaya Polyana awards, finalist of the Russian Booker.

Waking up one day in a hospital bed, the hero of the novel "The Aviator" realizes that he does not remember anything about himself - neither his name, nor who he is, nor where he is. On the advice of the attending physician, in the hope of recovering the history of his life, he begins to write down the memories that visited him. The reader is given the opportunity to learn about the events of the past from the lips of an eyewitness and hear an assessment of the present from the lips of an outside observer. The book took 3rd place in the reader's vote.

Received the third prize Ludmila Ulitskaya for the novel "Jacob's Ladder"

Lyudmila Ulitskaya was born in 1943 in the city of Davlekanovo in Bashkiria, where her family was evacuated. After the war she returned to Moscow. She graduated from the Faculty of Biology of Moscow State University with a degree in genetic biology. Today Lyudmila Ulitskaya is a writer, screenwriter and the first woman to win the Russian Booker Prize (in 2001). Among her literary achievements many different awards and prizes: "Big Book", "Book of the Year", Simone de Beauvoir Award (France), etc. Her works have been translated into 25 languages ​​of the world.

The new work of L. Ulitskaya "Jacob's Ladder" is a family chronicle of six generations of the Ossetsky family, with many heroes and a filigree plot. The novel is based on documents from a personal archive - many years of correspondence between grandparents, from the fears of the "silent generation" of parents, painstaking work and their own feelings and experiences.

In the center of the novel are the parallel destinies of Yakov Ossetsky, a man of books and an intellectual born in late XIX century, and his granddaughter Nora - a theater artist, a self-willed and active personality. Their "acquaintance" took place in early XXI century, when Nora read the correspondence between Yakov and Maria's grandmother and received access to his personal file in the KGB archive...

"National Bestseller"

The National Bestseller is one of the three largest Russian literary awards. This is the only annual all-Russian literary award, which is awarded in St. Petersburg for the best novel written in Russian during the calendar year. The motto of the award is “Wake up famous!”. The award was established in 2001 by literary critic Viktor Toporov and publisher Konstantin Tublin. Among the past winners of the National Best are Dmitry Bykov, Zakhar Prilepin, Viktor Pelevin, Alexander Prokhanov and others.

Season 16 winner Leonid Yuzefovich with romance "Winter road"

Leonid Yuzefovich - writer, screenwriter, historian, candidate of historical sciences. Author of detective and historical novels. Winner of literary awards: "National Bestseller" (2001, "Prince of the Wind") and "Big Book" (2009, "Cranes and Dwarfs").

The new book of the author tells about how in the vast expanses of Yakutia at the very end civil war(1922-1923) the life paths of the white general, truth seeker Anatoly Pepelyaev and the red commander, anarchist Ivan Strod crossed. Two extraordinary historical figures, both idealists, fanatically following their inner convictions. In the center of the book is their tragic confrontation among the Yakut snows, the story of their life, love and death. Their fates were different. Pepelyaev, after the defeat and captivity, served 13 years, Strod was awarded the Order of the Red Banner, graduated from the Frunze Academy. At the same time, both ended their lives in the same way - during the "great terror" they were accused of counter-revolutionary activities and shot. They were rehabilitated - Strod in 1957, and Pepelyaev - in 1989.

"Winter Road" is based on archival sources that Leonid Yuzefovich has been collecting for many years, but written in the form documentary novel. The author is primarily an attentive and conscientious historian, he does not take sides, but simply and truthfully tells about those tragic events. The calm tone of the narrative is perhaps the most radical difference between his novel and most books about the war.

Literary award "Russian Booker"

"Russian Booker" is the first non-state award in Russia, established after 1917. The award was founded in 1991, the first presentation took place in 1992. "Russian Booker" is awarded annually for the best novel of the year in Russian. It is considered one of the most prestigious Russian literary awards. The purpose of the award is to draw the attention of the reading public to serious prose, to provide commercial success books that affirm the humanistic system of values ​​traditional for Russian literature.

In 2016, the prize was awarded for the 25th time. Its winner was Petr Aleshkovsky behind novel "Fortress".

Petr Markovich Aleshkovsky (1957) - writer, historian, TV and radio host, journalist. Graduated from the Faculty of History of the Moscow state university them. M. V. Lomonosov (1979, Department of Archeology). For six years he participated in the restoration of monuments of the Russian North: Novgorod, Kirillo-Belozersky, Ferapontov and Solovetsky monasteries. Presenter of the program "ABC of Reading" on "Radio Culture".

The protagonist of the novel by Peter Aleshkovsky "Fortress" - Ivan Maltsov - historian, archaeologist. He is conducting excavations in an old Russian town and at the same time writing a book about the history of the Golden Horde. The authorities do not appreciate him, and his wife does not understand and does not share his views and beliefs. His strength is in loyalty to the profession, in honesty to himself and to people. It is strong, but it is precisely because of it that the hero is not able to negotiate with society, cannot adapt to today's reality, in which everything is decided by money and connections. It is very difficult for a person like Ivan Maltsov, with principles and self-esteem, to live when there is betrayal, flattery and money around, for the sake of which people forget about humanity, values ​​and their roots. Maltsov enters into an unequal and obviously doomed struggle with the system in the name of saving the ancient Fortress, which is threatened with destruction.

“I worked on the novel for six years. I called my work that way, because now the most important thing is to preserve the inner fortress, not to give up to cheap trends that fall upon us - lack of culture, the desire for profit, unwillingness to explore the past, create myths and maintain myth-making, ”Aleshkovsky said at the festive ceremony.

The novel "The Fortress" reached the final of the "Big Book" award.

"Student Booker"

The "Student Booker" project was created in 2004 by the Center for Contemporary Russian Literature of the Institute of Philology and History of the Russian State Humanitarian University as a youth version of the largest Russian literary award "Russian Booker". The author of the idea and curator of the award is Dmitry Petrovich Bak. At the first stage of the project, an essay competition on novels from the long list of the Russian Booker Prize 2016 is held, the winners of which form the jury of the Student Booker Prize. At the second stage, the jury members determine the best domestic novel of 2016 according to Russian students and announce the winner of the Student Booker Prize at a gala dinner in honor of the Russian Booker Prize.

The winner of the "Student Booker" in 2016 was Irina Bogatyreva behind novel "Kadyn".

Irina Bogatyreva was born in 1982 in Kazan and grew up in Ulyanovsk. Graduated from the Literary Institute. Gorky. Literature deals with early childhood, fiction She began writing at the age of fifteen. Published in the magazines "October", "New World", "Friendship of Peoples", "Day and Night", etc. Finalist and laureate of many literary awards, including "Debut", Goncharov's and S. Mikhalkov's awards. Member of the Writers' Union of Moscow.

In one of the interviews, Irina Bogatyreva about the book “Kadyn”: “The novel “Kadyn” arose out of love for Altai, passion for its culture, nature, history. The plot is based on the legend of the heroic sisters defending Altai. I copied the life of the Scythians from the archaeological materials of the Pazyryk culture (6-4 centuries BC), the most famous find of this period is the mummy of a girl from the Ukok plateau (the so-called princess of Ukok). But I wanted to write not a historical novel or a fantasy on a historical theme, but a text in which, through the prism of the mythical past, eternal, archetypal codes for any culture would be opened, and a modern person could recognize himself.

Literary Prize " Yasnaya Polyana»

Yasnaya Polyana is an annual all-Russian literary award established in 2003 by the Leo Tolstoy Museum Estate State Memorial and Natural Reserve and Samsung Electronics. The award is intended to celebrate the works of contemporary authors who carry the ideals of philanthropy, mercy and morality, reflect the humanistic traditions of classical Russian literature and the work of Leo Tolstoy. The main requirements that apply to the works of the nominees are the undeniable artistic merit of the text, universal moral values, cultural, religious and racial tolerance.

Awarded for the best piece of art traditional form in four categories:

Modern classic;

Childhood. Adolescence. Youth;

Foreign Literature (since 2015).

The winner of the nomination "Modern Classics" in 2016 was

Vladimir Makanin for the book "Where the sky converged with the hills."

Vladimir Makanin (1937) is a Russian writer. His works have been translated into many languages ​​of the world, books are published in France, Germany, Spain, Italy, the USA and other countries. He is the winner of many literary awards: the State Prize of Russia, the Russian Booker, the Big Book, the Pushkin Prize of the Toepfer Foundation (Germany) and others.

The book "Where the sky converged with the hills" contains three stories, combined common theme- theme of memories past life when the characters painfully experience the loss of connection between the past and the present.

The second story, which gave the title of the book, tells about the talented composer Bashilov, who grew up in a small village in the Urals. Reflecting on the source of his talent, an adult man mourns the world of his childhood, where even a wavy line on the horizon, where the sky converges with the hills, gave birth to a melody in the boy. With pain and anguish, he notices that with the growth of his genius, the genius of a composer, the “soul” of the village is shrinking and fizzling out. The songs and melodies that once sounded incessantly there now remain only in his creations. This leads Bashilov to a severe mental crisis, he blames himself for having in some incomprehensible way "sucked out" from his native village not only his song potential, but life itself.

In the nomination "XXI century" in 2016, for the first time in the history of the literary award "Yasnaya Polyana", two authors became laureates at once: Narine Abgaryan with a story "Three apples fell from the sky" And

Alexander Grigorenko with a story "Lost the blind pipe".

Narine Abgaryan - Russian writer Armenian origin, Member of the Board of Trustees of the "Creation" Charitable Foundation, multiple winner of various literary awards.

“Three Apples Fell From the Sky” is a very atmospheric book, with a mountain flavor, filled with the smells of Armenian cuisine. This is the story of one small village, lost high in the mountains, and its few inhabitants, each of whom is a little eccentric, a little grumpy, and in each of which real treasures of the spirit are hidden. In a simple and understandable language, Narine Abgaryan spoke about what people experience and what they live in anywhere on our planet - about childhood, about parents and ancestors, about friendship and love, about fear and pain, about kindness and fidelity, about the feeling of Motherland and about pride in your people.

Alexander Grigorenko is a journalist and writer, author of the books "Mebet", "Ilget". Published since 1989. Finalist of the Big Book (2012, 2014), NOS (2014), Yasnaya Polyana (2015) awards. Lives in Divnogorsk, Krasnoyarsk Territory, works in the East Siberian branch of Rossiyskaya Gazeta.

“I lost my blind pipe” is a work in the center of which is the story of a simple village Shpigulin family, where a long-awaited child, Shurka, is born. It doesn't take long for the family to realize that he was born deaf and mute. Parents could not cope with this, and Shurka is brought up by her grandmother, who is helped by numerous relatives. The author with great skill tells the story of the life of this child, his formation, transformation into a man. He is a half-holy, half-holy man. Everyone loves Shurka, but his whole life goes to ruin... And, as the jury member, writer Vladislav Otroshenko, said, "this work shows the structure of Russian life, when no one is to blame for anything, but everything perishes."

In "Childhood. Adolescence. Youth” was the laureate of 2016

Marina Nefedova for the book "Forester and his nymph".

Marina Evgenievna Nefedova (1973) - journalist, editor, writer. Graduated from the Faculty of Geology of Moscow State University, specialist in mineralogy. Since 2003, her articles have been published in various media, from Literary Newspaper and Russian Reporter to the Orthodox online publication Pravmir.ru. In 2005-2013 was a correspondent and then managing editor of a magazine about Orthodox life"Boring Garden". Marina Nefedova is an editor at the Nikea publishing house, which specializes in Christian literature. Author and compiler of the collections “Lay people - who are they” and “The soul of your child. Forty questions of parents about children. The story "The Forester and His Nymph" is the author's debut in fiction.

In "Childhood. Adolescence. Youth ”mark books that are important for the time of growing up and capable of laying down the concepts of justice, respect, love. This is how one can characterize the story of Marina Nefedova "The Forester and His Nymph". This story is a journey into the world of Moscow hippies of the eighties of the last century and into the world of youthful loneliness. This is a story of a choice between creativity and love, in which "everything becomes different when it comes into contact with death."

The main character is a talented seventeen-year-old girl, "the second Janis Joplin", as they say about her. "Bad girl", who, despite the endless throwing, in critical situation turns out to be a real person. But the main thing that makes the book absolutely universal is the subtly and accurately conveyed feeling of age, teenage throwing and love.

The winner of the nomination "Foreign Literature", designed to choose the most significant foreign book XXI century and to celebrate its translation into Russian, in 2016 became Orhan Pamuk for the book "My Strange Thoughts"

Ohran Pamuk (1952) is a well-known Turkish writer, winner of numerous national and international awards, including the Nobel Prize in Literature (2006) for "search for the soul of his melancholy city." Popular both in Turkey and abroad, the writer's works have been translated into more than fifty languages.

"My Strange Thoughts" is a novel about the life of a Turkish village family in big city. Pamuk shows the streets and quarters of Istanbul through the eyes of Mevlut, a simple street vendor who, for more than 40 years, delivers cool yogurt in the mornings and buzu, a local low-alcohol drink in the evenings, and watches what is happening around.

History is organically woven into real historical events that took place in the world from 1954 to March 2012 - the Cold War, the occupation of Cyprus by Turkish troops, the collapse of the USSR and much more. Times change each other, and Mevlut wanders around the familiar quarters, thinking about the world and his place in it. And the reader follows him around Istanbul of the 50s, 60s and beyond, watching how the city loses the features familiar to the old generation and turns into a modern metropolis.

Get more full information You can find out about the award, its laureates and their works on the award website: http://www.yppremia.ru/

The Book of the Year competition was established by the Federal Agency for Press and Mass Communications in 1999. The main goal of the competition is to support domestic book publishing, encourage the best examples of book art and printing, and promote reading in Russia. Awarded during the Moscow International Book Fair in several categories, from Prose of the Year to Electronic Book.

Winners of the "Book of the Year" in different time became Andrey Voznesensky, Kir Bulychev, Vasily Aksenov, Bella Akhmadulina, Evgeny Yevtushenko, Lyudmila Ulitskaya, Evgeny Grishkovets and many others famous writers and poets.

The winner in the nomination "Book of the Year" was Olga Berggolts for the book "Siege Diary: (1941-1945)".

Berggolts Olga Fedorovna (1910-1975) - poet, prose writer. She is known to many as the "Leningrad Madonna". During the days of the blockade, thanks to truthful, bitter poems and radio broadcasts, Olga became a symbol of the besieged Leningrad. She was called "the voice of the City". Her poems and words that sounded from the speakers helped people find the last strength in themselves in order to survive while maintaining human dignity. The most famous works of Olga Bergolts: "February Diary", " Leningrad poem”,“ Leningrad Speaks ”, poetry collections:“ Knot ”,“ Loyalty ”,“ Memory ”.

For Olga Bergholz, diary entries were her creative workshop. Without them, she could not exist and led them constantly from 1923 to 1971. For a long time they were in closed storage: first by order of government agencies, then by the will of the heirs. Now they are open.

Blockade Diary opens the publication of the entire corpus of Olga Bergolts's diaries. In it, she is extremely frank, merciless towards herself, literally “dissects” her own feelings, actions, thoughts.

The publication contains comments and articles written by historians and archive staff. Little-known photographs and documents from the personal archive of O.F. Berggolts (RGALI), as well as works by artists of besieged Leningrad, are reproduced.

The winner in the nomination "Prose" was Aleksey Ivanov behind novel "Bad weather".

Alexei Ivanov (1969) is an art historian, screenwriter, writer. He gained fame thanks to the novels "The Heart of Parma" and "The Geographer Drank His Globe Away", based on which the film of the same name was shot. Repeated winner of various literary awards: named after D. Mamin-Sibiryak (2003), named after P. Bazhov (2004), "Book of the Year" (2004), "Yasnaya Polyana" (2006), "Wanderer" (2006), "Big Book » (2006). "Big Book" (2006). For the novel Bad Weather, he not only won the Book of the Year award, but also received the Russian Government Prize in the field of culture.

Alexey Ivanov about the novel "Bad weather": "2008. A simple driver, a former soldier of the Afghan war, single-handedly arranges a daring robbery of a special van that transports the money of a big shopping center. So in the million-strong but provincial city of Batuev, a long history of a powerful and active union of veterans of Afghanistan ends - either a public organization, or a business alliance, or a criminal group: in the dashing nineties, when this union was formed and gained strength, it was difficult to distinguish one from another.

But the novel is not about money and not about crime, but about bad weather in the soul. About the desperate search for a reason why a person should trust a person in a world where only predators triumph - but it is impossible to live without trust. A novel that greatness and despair have the same roots. About the fact that each of us runs the risk of inadvertently falling into bad weather and never getting out of there, because bad weather is a refuge and a trap, salvation and death, a great consolation and eternal pain of life.

The winner of 2016 in the nomination "Poetry" was Oleg Chukhontsev for the book "Coming out of - leaving behind".

Chukhontsev Oleg Grigorievich (1938) - Russian poet, translator, author of books: “From Three Notebooks”, “Dormer Window”, “Wind and Ashes”, “From These Limits”, “Speech of Silence”, etc. Over the years, he worked in the poetry departments of the magazines “Youth” and “New world". The poems of Oleg Chukhontsev have been translated into many languages ​​of the world. He is a laureate of the State Prize of the Russian Federation, the Pushkin Prize of the Russian Federation, the Pushkin Prize of the Alfred Töpfer Foundation (Germany), the Anthologia Poetry Prize, the Grand Prize Triumph, the Grand Prize. Boris Pasternak, Russian national award"Poet" and many others.

The annotation to the book "Coming out of - leaving behind" sparingly says: "In new book, consisting of three sections - "The Uninvited Guest", "In the Shadow of Actinidia", "By the Fool's Hand", - includes poems that appeared after the book "Fifia" (2003)". The author touches on the topic of old age and care, through poetry conveys his perception of the world through the prism of past years and life experience.

In the nomination "Together with the book we grow" the winner of 2016 was

Grigory Kruzhkov for the book "Cup in English".

Grigory Kruzhkov (1945) - poet, translator, essayist, researcher of Anglo-Russian literary relations. Author of seven books of poetry. Laureate of various literary awards (State Prize Russian Federation, Alexander Solzhenitsyn Prize, etc.).

In the preface to the edition "A Cup in English", the author explains that the resulting texts in Russian can hardly be called translations, but rather a retelling of the English original text by Spike Milligan. The main thing that these texts have in common is a play on words. Grigory Kruzhkov boldly experiments with words, and the artist Yevgeny Antonenkov supports the poet's play. You can see a lot of interesting things in his witty and very capacious images. This is not a play on words, but juggling with images. Sometimes unusual and unexpected.

The 2016 winner in the Book and Film category is Alexey Batalov for the book "Artist's Chest".

Alexey Vladimirovich Batalov (1928) - theater and film actor, film director, screenwriter, teacher and public figure. Winner of several State Prizes in the field of art and cinematography, winner of various public awards. The actor is an honorary member of the Academy in the field of literature, art and journalism, participates in many cinematographic institutions and annually donates most of the fee to organizations such as the Peace Foundation and the Rodina Association.

"Artist's Chest" is an illustrated chronicle of more than half a century of Russian cinema and partly theater. Being a wonderful storyteller, Batalov tells about outstanding actors and directors, poets and artists. Attention is paid to the history of many famous films in which Batalov starred, funny and sometimes tragic episodes of filming.

The text of the book also includes his fairy tales, which the author characterizes as "not quite fairy tales and, probably, not quite for children." Meanwhile, the cartoons “Alien Fur Coat” and “The Hare and the Fly” were created based on them.

Alexey Vladimirovich appears before readers not only as an actor, but also as an artist Batalov. The book includes his paintings and a story about how he was a student of the remarkable Falk, who was then not pleasing to the authorities.

The book also contains never-before-published photographs of people dear to his heart, family heirlooms, long years kept in the author's house.

Aleksey Vladimirovich carefully put all this into his "artist's chest" ..

A significant amount of the monetary award (5 million crowns, which is about 800 thousand dollars), which makes it the largest international award in the field of children's and youth literature in the world. A substantial amount serves not only as a demonstration of how, according to the founders of the award, reading is important for children and adolescents, but also as an incentive for further creative searches and achievements for "workers of the literary workshop" who can potentially qualify for honorary title laureate. The Astrid Lindgren Prize is administered by the Swedish National Council for Culture.

Authors receive an award not for individual works, but for the entire result of their work. As already mentioned, the prize is awarded not only to writers. Illustrators and storytellers are also included in the list of nominees. In addition, the award can be awarded to people and organizations that, through their activities, increase interest in reading among children and adolescents. Despite the fact that the prize is awarded annually, there may be one or several laureates in one year, regardless of their nationality, place of residence, language of their works.

The initiators of the award pursue the brightest goals entirely in the spirit of Astrid Lindgren. They are sure that, first of all, books teach the younger generation to understand other cultures, to respect the spiritual values ​​of other peoples. They believe that the wider the reading circle of children and adolescents becomes, the stronger will be their moral foundation on which to build free society. Finally, they believe that attention to the candidates and laureates of the Astrid Lindgren Prize helps to distribute their works, increases the number of translations, circulation, and therefore helps even more children to get access to the best examples of modern literature.

Children have the right to good, exciting, innovative, relevant and serious literature, according to the jury members, who determine which of the nominated nominees is recognized as corresponding to the spirit of the incomparable Astrid Lindgren. The writer, who gave the world Carlson and Pippi, Emil and Roni, did a lot for the development of children's literature as an art form. Her books have pushed the boundaries of the world of children's books. The award in her name is awarded for creativity only of the highest standard, appropriate.

The prize has been awarded since 2003, but in the first year of its existence there was no list of nominees, simply because the system of national representatives who had the right to nominate their own candidates had not yet been organized. Thus, in 2003, the members of the jury awarded the prize of their choice. They settled on two epoch-making figures in children's literature of the 20th century: American writer and the artist Maurice Sendak and the Austrian writer Christina Nöstlinger.

Astrid Lindgren Prize Winners

2014 -Barbro Lindgren, writer, Sweden
2013 - Isol, illustrator and writer, Argentina
2012 - Gus Kuijer, writer, Netherlands
2011 - Sean Tan, illustrator, Australia
2010 - Kitty Crowther, illustrator, Belgium
2009 - Tamer Institute for Community Education, public organization, Palestine
2008 - Sonya Hartnett, writer, Australia
2007 - Banco del Libro, NGO, Venezuela
2006 - Katherine Paterson, writer, USA
2005 - Philip Pullman, writer, UK
Ryoji Arai, illustrator, Japan
2004 - Lygia Bojunga, writer, Brazil

The Vladislav Petrovich Krapivin International Children's Literary Prize is awarded once a year to a Russian or foreign author and is awarded on the writer's birthday, October 14. Along with the award, the laureate is awarded a diploma and a commemorative medal.

The award was initiated in 2006 by the Association of Ural Writers. In 2009, the V.P. Krapivin International Literary Prize ceased to exist.

In 2010, the Commonwealth of Children's Writers announced a new one - the International Children's Literary Prize named after V.P.

Vladislav Petrovich Krapivin was born in the city of Tyumen on October 14, 1938, in a family of teachers. In 1956 he entered the Faculty of Journalism of the Ural State University named after M.V. A. M. Gorky. In 1961, Vladislav Krapivin created the Caravel children's detachment (in 1965, the Pioneer magazine took patronage over the detachment). Vladislav Petrovich led the detachment for more than thirty years, currently young graduates of the detachment are at the head of the Caravelle. The first book by Vladislav Krapivin "Flight of the Orion" was published in 1962 in Sverdlovsk. Two years later, the author was accepted as a member of the Writers' Union of the USSR.

At present, V. Krapivin has published about three hundred books, many of them have been translated into foreign languages. His books are included in the "Golden Library of Selected Works for Children and Youth", "The Library of Adventure and Science Fiction", "The Library of World Literature for Children", in the Japanese 26-volume series " Selected writings Russian writers for teenagers.

Vladislav Petrovich Krapivin - Professor of the Tyumen State University, Honorary Citizen of the city of Yekaterinburg, laureate of awards Lenin Komsomol, A. Gaidar, L. Kassil, N. Kuznetsov, A. Grin, the literary prize of the Union of Writers of the RSFSR and the magazine "Ural Pathfinder" "Aelita" and the literary prize of the governor Sverdlovsk region, awards of the Round Table of the MDO "Rainbow of Cooperation" in the nomination "Amethyst Sphere" and other literary awards. At the All-Russian competition of readers' sympathies "Golden Key-96" was noted among the best.

For social activities he was awarded the badge of A. Gaidar of the Central Committee of the All-Union Leninist Young Communist League. In 1980 he received the title of an excellent student of public education of the RSFSR.

For literary and social activities he was awarded the Order of the Red Banner of Labor, the Order of Friendship of Peoples, the medal "For Valiant Labor", the Order of Honor. For his contribution to the education of young military personnel, by order of the head of the troops of the Far Eastern Border District, he was awarded the badge "Excellent Frontier Troops", second degree.

Vladislav Petrovich Krapivin International Children's Literary Prize is awarded once a year to a Russian or foreign author and is awarded on the writer's birthday, October 14. Along with the award, the laureate is awarded a diploma and a commemorative medal.


The award was initiated in 2006 by the Association of Ural Writers. In 2009, the International Literary Prize. V.P. Krapivina ceased to exist.

In 2010, the Commonwealth of Children's Writers announced a new International Children's Literary Prize. V.P. Krapivna, trying to preserve the traditions associated with the name of the writer: the day of the award on Krapivin's birthday and the medal, the sketch of which was drawn by Vladislav Petrovich.

Prize for the best prose work for children of secondary school age established to encourage literary activity in line with those laid down by V.P. Krapivin traditions.

Purpose of the Prize:

Attracting public attention to works that influence the formation of high morality and spirituality among children.

The laureate of the Prize is awarded with a cash prize, a medal and a Diploma.


2019 Award Winners

The 2019 award season featured 293 works by writers from 17 countries.

Prize winners:

Natalia Shitskaya (Novokuznetsk) for the work "Dogochella" and Anna Zenkova (Minsk, Belarus) for the book "Painted" ("With warm greetings from Fyokla") received special prize Commander's Choice.

Dmitry Ishchenko (Murmansk) with the work "In Search of a Boyish God" became a laureate in the nomination "Children's Jury's Choice".

Alexandra Zaitseva(Astrakhan) received a prize "Adult Jury's Choice" for the book "The Girl in the Balloon Doesn't Care".

The main winner was Elena Ozhich (real name Klishina) from Barnaul for the work "Spoilers". In the competition, Elena Ozhych performed under the pseudonym Zakhar Tabashnikov.

2018 Award Winners

The 2018 award season featured 237 works by authors from Russia, Ukraine, Belarus, Kyrgyzstan, Kazakhstan, Israel, Germany, France, Cyprus, Spain, and Canada.

The 2018 jury includes Oleg Rain, Larisa Krapivina, Tamara Mikheeva, Tatyana Kornienko, Mikhail Loginov, Olga Kolpakova and the Chairman of the Jury - Vladislav Petrovich Krapivin.

Prize winners:

Victoria Lederman(Samara) received a special prize Commander's Choice for the work "Theory of Improbability", published in two books by the publishing house "CompassGid".

Seventh-grader Matvey is simply haunted by troubles: in the morning they turned off the Internet, left him at school after school, and then his mother "delighted" - now someone else's girl will live with them! And in the evening I had to flee from three hooligans ...
So Matvey finds himself in an alternative universe where no Matvey Dobrovolsky exists, and instead of him there is a girl named Miloslava.

Serafima Orlova (Omsk) received a prize "Adult Jury's Choice" for "Tin Head" about modern teenagers and their problems.

Igor Svinin (Kusa, Chelyabinsk region) with the work "Heirs of Triglav" became a laureate in the nomination "Children's Jury's Choice".

The war between the Mage-Wanderer Empire and the Republic of Masters ended in victory for the Balance, an organization that oversees the balance of science and magic. Linek, an orphan of twelve years, has a hard time in this world. His dream: to become a master mechanic. He, like all the inhabitants of the republic, hates magicians and keeps family secret- a conspiracy-amulet that gives protection to the ancient deity Triglav.

Julia Simbirskaya (Yaroslavl) for the book "Distant Shores" received a prize in the nomination "Choice literary council".

This book is about growing up. How difficult it is in adolescence to cope with their feelings and desires. How easy it is to hurt loved ones without wanting to.

Award winners:

Maria Agapova (Sosnovy Bor, Leningrad Region) for "My Impossible Mother".

Serezha is very shy of his mother, who cannot indifferently pass by old women wallowing in the mud, she pities the homeless cats and dogs. But Seryozha is growing up, changes are taking place in his life with his mother, and in his eyes his mother suddenly becomes a fragile and confused woman who needs the protection of her son.

Tatyana Bogatyreva(St. Petersburg) for the book "Make a wish yesterday", which tells about the difficult growing up of a thirteen-year-old girl Sonya.

Elena Bodrova (Magnitogorsk, Chelyabinsk Region) and her book Feathers.

A fairy tale about the boy Onn, who dreams of returning the pigeons that have left their land. To do this, Onn collects feathers and makes wings.

Maria Boteva (Moscow) for the book "Garden named after TS".
The book is about a modern, friendly and large family that keeps the memory of a relative-hero of the Great Patriotic War.

Alexandra Zaitseva(Astrakhan) for the book "My Anika".

The reader sees the world through the eyes of thirteen-year-old Yegor. Yegor is not like everyone else, he has autism. His family lives in anticipation of a call to China for Yegor's treatment. Anika, a girl invited to give Yegor a massage, becomes Yegor's friend and Angel.

Dmitry Ovsyannikov(Omsk) for the novel "Shards of Sampo", based on the plot of the Karelian-Finnish epic "Kalevala".

Tatyana Saprykina(Novosibirsk) for the anti-utopia "Misa".

Anastasia Strokina(Moscow region) for the book "Owl Wolf".

Philosophical tale in which polar Wolf tells a little girl the story of the North. Stones, lichens, toads, and even old submarines come to life before the reader.



2017 Award Winners

October 13, on the eve of the birthday of Vladislav Petrovich Krapivin, in the Sverdlovsk Regional Library for Children and Youth. V.P. Krapivin, the ceremony of awarding the finalists and laureates of the award took place.

The winners were:

Rudashevsky Evgeny(Moscow) "Raven" - received a special prize for a work that Vladislav Krapivin personally notes - Commander's Choice.


Goncharuk Tatiana(Moscow) for the story "Pawns" was named the laureate of the Vladislav Krapivin Prize in the nomination jury selection.

Vardenburg Daria(Moscow) "Rule 69 for the thick gull".


Vlada Rai (Natalia Gonzalez-Senina)(Moscow) and Vladimir Yatsenko (Odessa) "Sister of the World".

Special diplomas and awards were presented by the partners of the award to all the finalists of this season.

Municipal association of libraries of Yekaterinburg noted the story Natalia Volkova"Colorful Snow"

Sverdlovsk Regional Library for Children and Youth. V.P. Krapivina I liked the work of Ivik Oleg "Heiress of the Amazons". True, two people had to be awarded at once, under this pseudonym Valery Ivanov and Olga Kolobova, writers from Rostov-on-Don, work.

Shipulina Tonya (Kazakhstan, Almaty) "Shrews and Slittooths" - took away two awards - calendars and a picture for her manuscript from the partner of the award firm "UNISOFT-print" and a gift from the Russian State Children's Library.

The work of Nina Dashevskaya(Russia, Moscow) "Rope Walker" chose Yekaterinburg teacher's house.

Shiryaeva Irina (Russia, Republic of Sakha (Yakutia), Chulman village) "A Million Crystal Slippers" - special prize from the Museum of Ural Writers.

"Commonwealth of Children's Writers" chose the most positive book on a difficult topic - manuscript Svetlana Kuznetsova(Samara region, Togliatti) "Mom, these are snorkels!".

Krasnova Tatiana(Russia, Moscow region, Istra) "Tanya" receives a gift from publishing house "Henry Pushel".

Andrey Shchupov (Oleg Rain), Svetlana Kuznetsova, Olga Suraeva, Tonya Shipulina, Olga Kolobova, Valery Ivanov, Vera Kuchina, Natalya Kupriyanova

Evgeny Rudashevsky "The RAVEN"

Dima is a city guy who goes hunting in the taiga for the first time. In his mentors he has three experienced adult hunters with very different characters and destinies. Hunting for Dima is an opportunity to show a valiant prowess, to show off his strength and dexterity in front of his peers. A book child, he romanticizes this craft, trembles with impatience, with anticipation of the first shot. But it just turns out not to be the case. Completely different feelings wake up in the boy, and it is not easy to take the life of another creature, to watch how the look of living eyes grows cloudy and goes out.
Two worlds collide in the story. Nature is a big, spacious house in which everyone should have enough space. This world is generous, but it can be both harsh and cruel, it can hit back. The human world... In the story, a bird (raven) interferes in the course of events, sets priorities for Dima, sharply indicates the position of each of the characters and becomes the center of the conflict.

Tatyana Goncharuk "Pawns"

"There are people who live without electricity and civilizational derivatives from it, besides, they have not decided: hikers are" pawns ", people from ours, or underworld? And this is in Karelia. The language of "Pawns" is so good, the author is detailed and accurate in detail, that the story looks authentic. Anyway, I, a little representing the problems of remote villages of Karelia, would classify "Pawns" as a fantasy genre, or at least a historical story - maybe it was like that 15 years ago? But that won't hurt the reader's enjoyment.". - Mikhail Loginov.

Daria Wardenburg. "RULE 69 FOR A FAT SEAGULL"

A solo circumnavigation of the world is an old dream of Jakob Becker. So what if he's thirteen! Laura Dekker did it at sixteen. And he can, he just needs to learn how to sail. Signing up for a class is easy. But to do it ... It turns out that yachtsmen do not immediately go to the open sea, first you need to remember a bunch of rules. Moreover, coaches are constantly changing, try to learn here. And if you also have problems with communication, or problems with oral speech, or both - things get even more complicated ...


Vlada Rai "SISTER OF THE WORLD"

“Mira’s sister, a girl named Miroslava, in the first paragraph falls from a tree and breaks her leg. This is a disaster: admission to the presidential college depends on the number of nuts collected. However, Mira’s will, quick wit and kindness make her the absolute winner in the nut race Natalia Gonzalez-Senina and Vladimir Yatsenko (pseudonym Vlad Rai) told a kind and bright story that social solidarity and understanding of other people's problems is more reliable than individual predation". - Mikhail Loginov.

Natalya Volkova "MULTICOLORED SNOW"

"In Soviet times, there were stories about how pioneers expose a traitor during the war. In "Snow" before the heroes and, first of all, the heroine, another task is to rehabilitate a person who was shot for collaborating with the Nazis. More precisely, to figure out how it was on in fact. "Snow" is a story about not rushing to condemn, and trying to justify the accused, seventy years ago or in our time. This morality can be called Christian, and humane, and just good". - Mikhail Loginov.

Oleg Ivik "HEI OF THE AMAZONS"

"Another duet is Valery Ivanov and Olga Kolobova, archaeologists from Rostov-on-Don. The Heiress is a historical and archaeological popular book, with the addition of four illustration stories about teenagers different eras ancient world. It is especially good that the worldview of children of ancient times is given without flirting and softening. The boy looks at the sinking ship from the shore, and prays to the gods that the ship will be thrown ashore so that it can be plundered. Another hero dreams of his own slave. At the same time, all stories are humane and this humanism is not imposed, but supported by the reliability of the material. "- Mikhail Loginov.

Tonya Shipulina "SHRUGGERS AND SLOPE-TOE"

"When in the city of Shrew, a beautiful shrew gives birth to a slittooth - a symbol of ugliness, he is taken to an orphanage, assigned a number and forced to sew shoes. This cruel world is written out by the author as cute and fearless as possible. Moreover, kindness, as always, does not dozing. Plus a lot of wonderful inventions, for example, a koshkoptah, singing on the balcony of a venerable shrew. Or a vegetarian shrew, dreaming of opening a rodent on wheels, the menu of which will not include insects. " - Mikhail Loginov.

Nina Dashevskaya "THE ROPE WALKER"

2016 Award Winners

On October 14, the Sverdlovsk Regional Library for Children and Youth hosted the presentation of the Vladislav Krapivin International Children's Literary Prize.

Traditions are important in a literary award. Here and in "Krapivinka" there are several important traditions: it is awarded on the writer's birthday - October 14, and the laureates receive not just a diploma, but a commemorative medal, which is attached to the lapel. The award was established ten years ago, and during this time it has become a prestigious prize, and if in the year of foundation there were 40 applications, then this year they have already received 247 applications from ten countries, including from the UK, Latvia, Cyprus, Kyrgyzstan, Ukraine .

The winners were:
Asya Kravchenko"Universe, what are your plans?" (Moscow)
Anna Nikolskaya "I killed a sausage man" (Great Britain)
Christina Strelnikova"Aunt Hat. Hunting for Tamaranda (Ufa)
Vlad Kharebova "Page One" (Latvia)

Was also awarded "Commander's Choice"- This is a special prize for a work that Vladislav Krapivin personally notes. It was received by Muscovite Pyotr Vlasov for his work Draugen. The story of the "star" boy.

Prize of the Children's Jury, Caravel Squad got Ekaterina and Pavel Karetnikovs for the City of the Seven Winds.

Victoria Lederman and her “Only eleven! Or "Shura-mura" in the fifth "D" "rewarded All-Russian Public Organization "Children's and Youth Social Initiatives".

Daria Dotsuk received Prize of the Yekaterinburg House of Teachers- Hike to two waterfalls.

Anna Anisimova for "The Stories of Tsvetnoy Proezd" received Prize of the United Museum of Ural Writers, Elena Lenkovskaya("On the other side of the dead") noted magazine "URAL" and the Municipal Association of Libraries of Yekaterinburg.

Diploma winners became Alena Aleksina, Marta Slavina, Ekaterina Sobol, Alena Aleksina.


Commander's Day: the Vladislav Krapivin Literary Prize was summed up in Yekaterinburg (video report)


Asya Kravchenko (Anna Svetovna Kravchenko) - psychologist, translator from French, journalist. As a child, she dreamed of becoming a biologist, then a teacher, then a geologist. She studied at Moscow State University at the Faculty of Psychology, then a year at the Sorbonne. Then again at the Faculty of Psychology of Moscow State University in graduate school, where she defended her dissertation.


Anna Nikolskaya is a children's writer, winner of the Sergei Mikhalkov Gold Medal and the Runet Users' Choice Award. The story of Anna Nikolskaya "I killed a sausage man" is based on the memories of the author's father about his military childhood. Many noted that the story sunk into the soul, it is true, it is impressive.

Vlada Kharebova - poetess and artist. Page One is her first novel.

Page One is a novel for teenagers “or ex-teens”. The action takes place in Tskhinval in 1989-1990. Many members of the jury noted that this is not a novel, but a real epic. An epic about the life of teenagers in the conditions of Georgian aggression against South Ossetia in 1989-1990.


Christina Strelnikova came up with a wonderful fairy tale for children, funny and unusual “Aunt Hat. Hunting for Tamaranda.

2015 Prize Winners

The award ceremony took place on October 14, 2015 in Yekaterinburg. The ceremony was held in the Sverdlovsk Regional Library for Children and Youth.

209 works from 13 countries were accepted for the competition in 2015 (Russia, Ukraine, Belarus, Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, Uzbekistan, Latvia, Cyprus, Great Britain, Israel, Czech Republic, USA, Germany. Two works came from the Donetsk People's Republic).

“The jury selected 11 works. Amazing, each in its own genre, they are unique and very deep,” said the writer, jury member Tatiana Kornilenko. Among the books are realistic stories, fantasy, fairy tales and stories about animals, memoir stories, as well as more serious and even somewhat harsh works. “Such literature is also needed, because our teenagers cannot be raised only on something tender and sweet, another kind of influence is also required,” Kornilenko T.

The finalists of the competition received special prizes from the partners of the award. Children's jury awards (detachment "Caravel") presented a special prize. This year, the public organization "Children's and Youth Social Initiatives" joined the award. For the first time, a translation from national languages Russia. Thanks to the support of the Association small peoples North and the Writers' Union of Yakutia, the finalist from such a remote region as the Momsky Ulus of the Republic of Sakha was able to come to the award ceremony. The authors arrived from Cyprus and Kazakhstan.

This year's award winners are two writers:

Adelia Amrayeva from Kazakhstan with the book "I want to live" and
Yakut writer Maria Fedotova-Nulgynet with a book "Naughty Nulgynet".

Amraeva Adeliya "I want to live"

Amraeva Adeliya is a young writer from the village of Bereke, in the Almaty region. Graduated from the Kazakh University of International Relations and World Languages ​​named after Abylai Khan, teacher of German and Turkish. She was a participant in the Seventh Seminar of Young Writers Writing for Children in Melikhovo (June 14–18, 2010) and the Tenth Forum of Young Writers of Russia, the CIS and Abroad (October 2010).

Adelia Amrayeva became a finalist for the Vladislav Krapivin International Literary Prize and the Sergei Mikhalkov Prize. Her story "Football Field" was selected among 10 other children's works out of 194 submitted to the competition.

"Football field": "Life is a football field," says ten-year-old Dimka, for whom there is nothing more important than football. He dreams of becoming a professional football player and leading the national team to the World Cup final. He really wants his mother to see this decisive match. But, alas, my mother is against my son playing football. And all because his father, who does not live with them, is a football player. And Dimka is left with one of two things: go to the dream in spite of everything, or drown in prohibitions and doubts.

Adelia writes from childhood: “Only my mother, several classmates and the Russian language teacher Askar Mulkamanovich read me then. He first told me that I could be a writer. I am extremely grateful to him…” Writing again, already consciously, with the desire to learn and move on, Adeliya Amrayeva began to write at the Open Literary School of Almaty. The first story she put down on paper was a sad story about twin brothers.

There is a lot of personal in the story of Adeliya Amrayeva. Her book I Want to Live deals with child suicide.

Maria Fedotova-Nulgenet "Naughty Nulgynet"

Yakutian Maria Prokopievna Fedotova-Nulgenet is the first female novelist writing in the Even language. She was born on December 31, 1946 in the Ust-Yansky district of the Yakut ASSR. In 1971, she entered the Vilyui Pedagogical College, after graduating from which she still works at the Orto-Doydun School in the Momsky District of the Republic of Sakha (Yakutia). In 1988 she graduated in absentia from the Yakut language and literature department of the Yakut State University.

In 1995, her first story for children "Tebenetteeh Nulgynet" ("Tricks of Nulgynet") was published, which was continued in 1997. Since 1999, she has been a member of the Writers' Union of Russia.

Tale "Naughty Nulgynet" a few years ago it was published in the republican literary and art magazine "Polyarnaya Zvezda". The fairy tale "Naughty Nulgynet" is largely autobiographical. It tells about a girl who was born in a reindeer team, like the author himself.


Pavel Vereshchagin


Traditionally, the name of the laureate of the award according to the version of the Caravel detachment was also named - it was a Moscow writer Pavel Vereshchagin. Artwork by Pavel Vereshchagin "Red named Red"- the story of how people adopted a dog - teaches the reader about kindness and responsibility.

Irina Bogatyreva

The Ekaterinburg Teacher's House named its laureate - "Near the Music" by Nina Dashevskaya.

The prize was presented by the Public all-Russian organization"Children's and youth social initiatives" novel "Ganin" by Irina Bogatyreva.


The municipal association of libraries of the city of Yekaterinburg liked the work the most Ai eN "Mutangels", and the United Museum of Ural Writers - Knyshiki, Kuzlya and Fufyrla by Alena Dolgikh.

Alena Dolgikh

Books by Alena Dolgikh


Job Alena Dolgikh "Knyshiki, Kuzlya and Fufyrla" talks about a fictional people living in their own world and trying to understand it.

Aya en - fantasy cycle "Mutangels" - the first book "Level PI"

In the text of this book, a certain cipher is hidden, which lovers of secrets and riddles will have to unravel!

The book is captivating from the first page, as it is preceded by this warning: “The instructions given between the lines in this book do not pose the slightest danger to anyone who is a person, only a person and no one but a person. All other mutangels, and especially infilopers (even if they do not remember who they are and consider themselves ordinary people), Mebby Klein asks when reading to take all necessary precautions. Remember that a person is responsible only for his life, and mutangels are responsible for everything that happens. Everywhere further: Didi = Additional Information for infilopers".

The author Aya en describes a very strange world - maybe it's our Earth, or maybe one of its clones, one of the parallel worlds. All the inhabitants of this planet are mutants who have developed amazing superpowers in themselves, on the whole Earth there is only one non-mutant teenager, who is monitored by one secret institute. He has complexes because he can neither fly nor pass through walls, and does not even realize that the fate of the whole world may depend on him. A young man is in love with a girl, but she is a mutant. And if she falls in love with him, she will disappear. But he doesn't know it yet. What is it like to be ordinary person among a race of super beings? What is it like to be mutants on the planet of humans? And is it easy to be an angel who needs to protect both people and mutants?

Ai eN

"Mutangels" Ai en


2014 Prize Winners

Russian authors became laureates of the Vladislav Krapivin International Children's Literary Prize. The award to the best modern children's writers on October 14 - his birthday - was traditionally presented by the founder of the competition himself.

"The general impression of the works is very good. There is not a single work that would cause complaints. And I was sincerely glad for the level of all the works, as if I had found myself in a library where there are very good, interesting books. Those who became laureates deserved this award quite justifiably,” said Vladislav Krapivin.

As a result, the first place went to the writer from Moscow Stanislav Vostokov with the book "Frosya Korovin".
The second place was awarded to Nina Dashevskaya, a musician from Tver, for the story "Willy".
Third place went to Ekaterina Kreutzwald with the book "Marta".

Vostokov Stanislav "Frosya Korovina"

In the Vologda village, the girl Frosya lives with her grandmother (while her parents-geologists are traveling on expeditions) and grows up as a “real village woman”, who knows how to manage in the garden, and to fit another fallen off part to an old house, and to ski to the neighboring village to school , and on the ice of the river to the regional center on skates ...

Frosya and her grandmother Aglaya Ermolaevna live in the monument. Not in a statue, of course. In the architectural monument! And Frosya's worries are sometimes not the same as those of an ordinary girl: not about new outfits and computer games, but about how to get to the city in a snowfall, how to manage the household alone, if the grandmother is in the hospital (she had only one assistant - the bear Gerasim). And then the house was stolen: museum staff wooden architecture and they took him to the museum... The humorous story is suitable for readers from 10 years old. This book has amazing characters, wonderful humor, a lot of strange words like “basement” and “thumping”, and even fresh country air!

Dashevskaya Nina

Last year, Nina Dashevskaya made her debut as an author of children's literature and for the first time took part in the competition with the work "Violin by an Unknown Master". Then she managed to become one of the finalists and win a special prize from the association of libraries in Yekaterinburg. This year, her book on the talking bike won the highest award.

"This is a work about friendship and the search for friends. About the fact that friends can be with us, but we don't see them. And it's also a book about the fact that there is reality and there are dreams. It is generally accepted that dreams interfere with doing business, and I would like to show that dreams lead to real results,” explained Nina Dashevskaya.


This year, one of the innovations is that children were able to choose their own winner, regardless of the opinion of the adult jury. They became a Samara writer Victoria Lederman and her work "Calendar Ma (y) I".

“This year we involved the children themselves in the judging. Because it is children who are the ones for whom the books are intended, for whom this literature is being created. It is in vain to say that young people read little. The children read, but it is important what kind of literature falls into the hands of the children,” said Larisa Krapivina, a member of the Literary Council of the Prize.

Chilling story "Death to dead souls!" Andrei Zhvalevsky and Evgenia Pasternak is an action-packed thriller, which takes place in ... a library.

The main characters are books. Children, however, also come across, and many of them can not stand the lessons of literature. But at the end of the story, even those who used to fall asleep at the mention of, say, Leo Nikolayevich Tolstoy, begin to understand that not all classics are terrible boring things, that War and Peace, it turns out, is even nothing, and they themselves rush to the library write school fanfiction.

2nd place: Anastasia Maleiko (Russia, Chelyabinsk) "My mother loves the artist."

Prize to them. Korney Chukovsky

Awarded since 2007.

Founders : Union of Writers of Moscow and Memorial House-Museum of Korney

Chukovsky in Peredelkino.

On December 3, 2017, the closing ceremony of the eleventh Korney Chukovsky Moscow Festival of Children's Literature took place at the Central House of Writers with the presentation of the literary Prize of the same name (the tenth in a row) in various categories.

The 2017 award winners are:

Alexander Grin Russian Literary Prize

August 23, 2017 in the Kirov Regional Library for Children and Youth. A.S. Green, the ceremony of presenting the literary prize named after A.S. Green. This year it was awarded to the Kirov children's writer Tamara Kopaneva for the book "Vyatskoe far away".

“Vyatskoye far away” is the sixth book published by Tamara Kopaneva, it consists of the past story “How Vanche chose his bride” and other works. In them, the reader will meet the characters different fairy tales: skillful, lucky, brave inhabitants of the Vyatka region. The book is based on fairy tales collected from different corners Vyatka region by ethnographer, dialectologist and folklorist D.K. Zelenin.

The book "Vyatskoye far away" has already received 10 different awards since 2015. The Green Prize was the 11th.

Runet Book Prize

Awarded since 2011.

Runet Book Prize annual award in the field of literary business and book business on the Internet. The award is given to the best Russian and foreign authors, as well as book projects based on the results of the selection of the Expert Council and the popular vote of Runet users.

In 2017, the best children's book according to Runet users was Donators. Book 3. The game of the wise men "Ekaterina Sobol.

All-Russian competition for the best literary work for

children and youth "KniguRu"

Awarded since 2010.

Founders: federal agency for Press and Mass Communications and Non-Commercial Partnership "Center for Support of Russian Literature".

The jury consists of children 10-16 years old.

Literary award "Alice"

Awarded since 2001.

Founders: Organizing Committee of Roscon.

The award is given the best work children's and teen fiction, which saw the light of day in the past calendar year.

This is the only independent book competition in Russia where children's books are judged by the children themselves. Competitive books are novelties: for the first time published in Russian in the current year, works by domestic and foreign authors for children age category from "6+" to "16+", artistic, educational, famous authors and debutant authors, old texts with new author's illustrations, electronic and audio books.

Books for readers 5-8 years old,

1st class

2-3 classes,

4 classes

5-6 grades,

7-8 grades,

9-11 grade.

Literary Prize "Lyceum" A. S. Pushkin for young writers and poets

All-Russian Literary Prize. P. P. Ershova for works for children and youth

Awarded since 2005.

Founders: The Union of Writers of Russia and the administration of the city of Ishim, Tyumen region

Awarded in the following nominations:

- "From the descendants of P. P. Ershov"– for the preservation and development of the best traditions of Russian children's literature;

- Link of Times- nomination named after V.G. Utkov, for the preservation and development of the best traditions of children's cognitive (popular science) literature;

– “Choosing a Patron”- for a work for children and youth that continues the traditions of the fairy tale genre.

June 10, 2018 in Ishim, as part of the celebration of Ershov Days, dedicated to the memory of the author of the fairy tale "The Little Humpbacked Horse", the laureates of the 13th Ershov International Literary Prize were awarded. Of the four hundred literary works selected the most deserving.

This year's winners are:

In nomination "Patron's Choice" won Evgeny Belousov(Feodosia) for the book "Legends, there were fairy tales of the Crimea."

This book is about the amazing events of the Crimean history. Here are exciting stories about brave Greek settlers and fearless warrior rulers, about the history of Slavic writing and the picturesque corners of the peninsula. In this book, fiction coexists with reality, and fairy tale characters live very close...

In nomination "Link of Times"- (for the preservation and development of the best traditions of children's cognitive, popular science literature) won Oleg Bundur(Kandalaksha) for a series of books about the North and the Arctic.

In nomination "From the descendants of P. P. Ershov"(for the preservation and development of the best traditions of Russian children's literature) - Anna Sarantseva (creative pseudonym Sarra Annsun (St. Petersburg), author and screenwriter of the children's animated series Luntik and His Friends.

This year appeared new nomination"Bezrukov outpost"- for the best military-patriotic work for youth. The first winner was Edward Verkin(Ivanovo) for the book "Cloud Regiment".

Awarded a special prize Igor Emelyanov(GTRK "Region-Tyumen") for the script of a documentary film about the construction of the Petrovsky Church in the village of Ershovo (Bezrukovo) at the birthplace of the great storyteller.

Literary competition "Short children's work"

The goal of the project is to find and promote young authors writing in Russian for children aged 5 to 11 years.

This is a competition of open opportunities, anyone over the age of eighteen can take part in it. The prize for the winner is the publication of a book by the Nastya and Nikita publishing house.

The competition was created in 2010 by the publishing house "Nastya and Nikita" to search for and promote young Russian writers and is held once a year - in the fall.

About 500 prose works for children participate in each season. Poems are not accepted. Eighteen wonderful children's books have been published as a result of the competition over five years. Age of participants 18+.

Previously, the project was based on the largest Russian Internet platform for authors - the Samizdat website. In 2015, the Competition moved to the website of the Nastya and Nikita publishing house.

Nominations:

  1. Artistic texts for children (fairy tales and stories).
  2. Cognitive texts for children (travel books, knowledge, biographies).
  3. Special nomination "Notes of a Naturalist" with the support of the Prioksko-Terrasny State Natural Biosphere Reserve named after M.A. Zablotsky. The special nomination involves artistic and cognitive prose for children from 6 to 11 years old about Russian nature (story, fairy tale, play, educational work). The jury expects to see artistic and educational texts dedicated to one or more species of animals or plants found on the territory of the Prioksko-Terrasny Reserve (the list can be found on the Reserve’s website), artistic and educational texts about the nature of central Russia, educational texts about environmentalists - on the work and employees of specially protected natural areas.

The main award for the winner is the publication of a book, 1st, 2nd and 3rd places are awarded with diplomas and prizes. Separate prizes are provided for the winner of the special nomination "Naturalist's Notes".


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