Women’s Prize for Fiction

English literary prize
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Also known as: Bailey’s Women’s Prize for Fiction, Orange Broadband Prize for Fiction, Orange Prize for Fiction
Formerly:
Baileys Women’s Prize for Fiction (2014–17), Orange Prize for Fiction (1996–2007; 2008–12), and Orange Broadband Prize for Fiction (2007–08)
Related Topics:
novel
fiction

Women’s Prize for Fiction, English literary prize for women that was conceptualized in 1992 and instituted in 1996 by a group of publishing industry professionals—including agents, booksellers, critics, journalists, and librarians—who were frustrated by what they perceived as chauvinism in the selection of finalists for literary awards such as the Booker Prize.

The award was initially funded by an anonymous endowment and by the Orange Group, a telecommunications company that had frequently supported the arts. Eligible for the prize were novels written in English by a woman in the previous year. Translations were not eligible, but publishers could submit works by women of all nationalities, provided that the works had been released in the United Kingdom during the previous year. The prize was administered by Booktrust, an English literary advocacy organization, and sponsored and organized by the Orange Group. It was judged by a female panel chosen by the prize’s founders. Organizers dismissed accusations of sexism, though they formed a shadow panel of male judges for the 2001 contest. In 2005 the Orange Award for New Writers—also restricted to women—was created for first-time novelists and short-story writers; it was discontinued in 2010.

For a number of years, the prize was named to reflect its sponsorship. It was known as either the Orange Prize for Fiction or the Orange Broadband Prize for Fiction until the Orange Group dropped its sponsorship in 2012, after the presentation of that year’s award. The following year it was funded by a group of private donors and renamed the Women’s Prize for Fiction. From 2014 to 2017 the cream liqueur brand Baileys was the sole sponsor of the award, which became known as the Baileys Women’s Prize for Fiction. In 2018 Baileys was joined by several other backers, and the award’s name was changed back to the Women’s Prize for Fiction.

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Winners have included Carol Shields, Kate Grenville, Ann Patchett, Zadie Smith, Barbara Kingsolver, and Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie.

Winners of the Women’s Prize for Fiction are listed in the table.

Women's Prize for Fiction*
year author country of origin title of work
*The award was known as the Orange Prize for Fiction and the Orange Broadband Prize for Fiction prior to 2013, when it became the Women's Prize for Fiction. Liqueur brand Baileys assumed sponsorship in June 2013, and the award was known as the Baileys Women's Prize for Fiction from 2014 to 2017. It subsequently was renamed the Women's Prize for Fiction.
1996 Helen Dunmore U.K. A Spell of Winter
1997 Anne Michaels Canada Fugitive Pieces
1998 Carol Shields Canada Larry's Party
1999 Suzanne Berne U.S. A Crime in the Neighborhood
2000 Linda Grant U.K. When I Lived in Modern Times
2001 Kate Grenville Australia The Idea of Perfection
2002 Ann Patchett U.S. Bel Canto
2003 Valerie Martin U.S. Property
2004 Andrea Levy U.K. Small Island
2005 Lionel Shriver U.S. We Need to Talk About Kevin
2006 Zadie Smith U.K. On Beauty
2007 Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie Nigeria Half of a Yellow Sun
2008 Rose Tremain U.K. The Road Home
2009 Marilynne Robinson U.S. Home
2010 Barbara Kingsolver U.S. The Lacuna
2011 Téa Obreht Yugoslavia The Tiger's Wife
2012 Madeline Miller U.S. The Song of Achilles
2013 A.M. Homes U.S. May We Be Forgiven
2014 Eimear McBride Ireland A Girl Is a Half-Formed Thing
2015 Ali Smith Scotland How to Be Both
2016 Lisa McInerney Ireland The Glorious Heresies
2017 Naomi Alderman U.K. The Power
2018 Kamila Shamsie Pakistan Home Fire
2019 Tayari Jones U.S. An American Marriage
2020 Maggie O'Farrell U.K. Hamnet
2021 Susanna Clarke U.K. Piranesi
2022 Ruth Ozeki U.S./Canada The Book of Form and Emptiness
2023 Barbara Kingsolver U.S. Demon Copperhead
The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica This article was most recently revised and updated by Amy Tikkanen.