Avrina Prabala-Joslin scooped the top prize for her work She鈥檚 a Tank, a Battalion, a Banyan, while Claire Carroll picked up the Department of Literature, Film, and Theatre Studies (LiFTS) Wild Writing Prize for her story Cephalopod.
Both winners will receive 拢500 and the top four authors in the Wild Writing Prize will also be invited to a series of Wild Writing Masterclasses hosted by writers from LiFTS.
Speaking about the Wild Writing Prize, judges Dr James Canton, from LiFTS, and , said: 鈥淲e were looking for stories that were original, innovative and fresh; that had a sense of the wild, a deft delving into nature and humankind鈥檚 place in the natural world 鈥 with a notion that many would frame, if subtly, our current state of being in an era of climate emergency. We were so impressed by the quality of the shortlist that emerged. They were all extraordinarily exciting stories: salient, vivid, and extremely well written.
鈥淲e chose as the winner a piece that we felt captured, in beautiful prose, the exquisite strangeness of animal life as well as our complex human relationships 鈥 that rendered the most intimate human relationships newly strange, and the strange animals of the ocean as newly intimate.鈥
Claire Carroll, who lives in Somerset, said: 鈥Cephalopod is taken from a series of short stories written in response to the climate crisis, so the vision of the Wild Writing category really resonated with me. I鈥檓 absolutely thrilled to have won, and excited to see this award paving the way in platforming writers of nature and environmental and climate crisis fiction.鈥