The Children’s Booker prize will tell kids that they matter

The Guardian 2 min read 9 hours ago

<p>As the number of children reading for pleasure hits a record low, the new award highlights its importance for wellbeing, and will give away thousands of books</p><ul><li><p><a href="https://www.theguardian.com/books/2025/oct/24/booker-prize-launches-childrens-booker-frank-cottrell-boyce">Booker prize launches £50,000 children’s award</a></p></li></ul><p>At the end of the movie Ratatouille, the food reviewer Anton Ego, voiced by Peter O’Toole, makes this beautiful defence of the art of the critic: “There are times when a critic truly risks something. That is in the discovery and defence of the new. The world is often unkind to new talent, new creations. The new needs friends.” The Booker prize has been a friend to the new – new voices, new names, new ways of telling a story – for 56 years. It has made household names of writers whose work might otherwise only have been enjoyed by a few. More importantly – especially since the launch of the International Booker in 2005 – it has helped broaden the horizons of readers.</p><p>Now there’s going to be a Booker prize for children’s books aimed at readers aged eight to 12, and I am going to be the first chair of judges. Despite my vast vocabulary, I can’t begin to tell you how hopeful this makes me. Because if the Children’s Booker brings the same energy and boldness to the world of children’s books, it’s going to make a real difference to the lives of thousands of children. It comes at a crucial moment. Everyone knows that children who read for pleasure do better educationally and emotionally. Yet – as we approach the government’s Year of Reading – we find ourselves in a situation where the number of children who read daily has <a href="https://www.theguardian.com/books/2025/jun/11/children-reading-enjoyment-falls-national-literacy-trust">dropped to a 20-year low</a>. We risk losing a whole generation.</p>
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