Children's Peace Literature Award is an Australian literary prize awarded every other year by the South Australian Psychologists for Peace, an interest group of the Australian Psychological Society.[1]
The Children's Peace Literature Award was inaugurated in 1987, when Gillian Rubinstein won for her book Space Demons.[1]
Year | Author | Title | Publisher | References |
---|---|---|---|---|
1987 | Gillian Rubinstein | Space Demons | Omnibus Books | [1][2] |
1989 | Victor Kelleher | The Makers | Puffin | [2] |
1991 | Libby Gleeson | Dodger | Puffin | [2] |
1993 | Isobelle Carmody | The Gathering | Puffin | joint winners[2][3] |
Bob Graham | Rose Meets Mr Wintergarten | Penguin Books | ||
1995 | Brian Caswell | Deucalion | University of Queensland Press | [2] |
1997 | James Moloney | A Bridge to Wiseman's Cove | University of Queensland Press | [2] |
1999 | Phillip Gwynne | Deadly Unna | Penguin Books | [2] |
2001 | James Moloney | Touch Me | University of Queensland Press | [2] |
2003 | Irini Savvides | Sky Legs | Hodder Headline Australia | [2] |
2005 | Kirsten Murphy | The King of Whatever | Penguin Books | [2] |
2007 | Michael Gerard Bauer | Don't Call Me Ishmael | Omnibus | [2] |
2009 | Christine Harris | Audrey Goes to Town | Little Hare Books | joint winners[2] |
Kate Constable | Winter for Grace | Allen & Unwin | ||
2011 | Sue Walker | Arnie Avery | Walker Books | [2][4] |
2013 | Aaron Blabey | The Ghost of Miss Annabel Spoon | Penguin | junior readers[2][5] |
Barry Jonsberg | My Life as an Alphabet | Allen & Unwin | older readers[2][5] | |
2015 | Nicole Hayes | One True Thing | Random House Australia | [2][6] |
2017 | Phil Cummings | Boy | Scholastic Australia | [2][7] |
2019 | Sue deGennaro | Missing Marvin | Scholastic Australia | [2][8] |
2021 | Fiona Hardy | How to Write the Soundtrack to Your Life | Affirm | [9] |